On the art of conversation, “There are two parts to music, kid: the notes, and the silences.”
SHADOWBLACK, the second novel in De Castell’s wonderfully entertaining young adult fantasy series, definitely tones down the slightly more mystic extended metaphors, those allegorical moments clearly designed to serve as teaching messages to a young adult reader. However, it also ratchets up the humour, the adventure, the fantasy camaraderie, and the rootin’, tootin’, high-falutin’ cowpokes versus the bad guys theme by more than a few notches as well. The smart-aleck, wise-cracking humour from Reichis, the mercurial flying fur-ball squirrel cat with a murderous chip on its shoulder, was reminiscent of Shrek’s donkey equipped with an attitude and the fangs and claws to back it up. Definitely worth the price of admission all by itself. But that said, the fun is never overdone and those adult messages are still there – loyalty, xenophobia and racism, recognition of nationhood, love and friendship. And you have to hand it to De Castell, science lovers will even recognize a reference to the magical equivalent of long distance quantum entanglement of virtual particle pairs! (Where in the world did that idea come from??)
SHADOWBLACK ends with Kellen achieving a greater understanding of his life’s path and a fuller comprehension of the nature of his enemies. I might have turned the last page on SHADOWBLACK but I’m certainly on a fast track to open the first page of CHARMCASTER, #3 in the series. A special “woot, woot” from a Canadian reader to a Canadian author.
Paul Weiss