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360 pages, Paperback
First published November 14, 2017

Infant snow drifted down in gentle whorls, flakes as large as pancakes glinting silver as they fell. Shaggy trees wore white leaves and moonlight glimmered across a glassy lake. The night was soft and all was slow and snow had hushed the earth into a deep, sound slumber and oh, winter was fast approaching.

And so she was, for the most part, an irritable, unkind, angry girl, with little pleasantness to distract her from the constant death demanding her attention. Tonight, she swept a defeated glance around the many rooms of her drafty home and promised herself that one day she would do well enough to repair the broken windows, mend the torn draperies, replace the missing torches, and reinvigorate the faded walls.
Though she worked hard every day, Laylee was seldom pain for the work she did. The magic that ran through her veins made it so she was bound by blood to be a mordeshoor, and when the dead were delivered to her door, she had no choce but to add them to the pile. The people of Whichwood knew this and too often took advantage of her, sometimes paying very little, and sometimes not at all. But one day, she swore, she'd breathe light and color back into the dimness that had diminished her life.









#1) Furthermore ★★★☆☆

Even though I knew it was about ‘a girl who washes dead bodies’, I didn’t expect what I got. It was morbid, fascinating, heart-breaking, sweet, rich and somewhat disturbing. Scratch that, it was a LOT disturbing.
It’s like getting a nicely wrapped present that also fortunately, happens to have something you actually wanted. WIN.
There was a scene where people had their skins peeled off and stolen, the victims were running around in the death cold winter bleeding everywhere, screaming in front of their children and the thieves didn’t know how to put the skins on themselves so they ended up looking grotesque and horrifying. Yeah, I was eating lunch while reading that scene. It was decidedly unpleasant.
I didn’t see the pairing up coming as the general idea in my head after reading Furthermore was that Alice and Oliver were a thing. So Oliver and Laylee’s pairing came as surprise, but a delightful one. I can’t describe how beautifully both of their emotions were captured, especially Oliver’s. Also, those little sentences that hinted the future and just moved right on with the story were clever and they did have the desired effect, whatever that was. Bottom line is, I was pleased beyond words.
