First of all I wanted to thank Inspired Quill for the chance to read this book in exchange of an honest review.
TW: abusive behaviour, beating, death
Jarka is a former street kid, born with a crooked foot, but with the peculiar ability of reading the Wind. He's able to have vision, interpret them and,in doing so, helping the king, since he's training to advise him, under Adrya's, the King's right hand woman, supervision. Away from the hard street life, Jarka finds himself involved again in it when street kids start disappearing and he suspects the danger may come from the castle. When one of the kids he saved from the streets ends up getting hurt, Jarka is determined to catch and stop the culprit, even if it means getting involved in politcs, plottings and deciding to stand up for himself...even if it means losing his position at the castle.
The Wysman is a YA fantasy novel with a disabled main character, who is impossible not to love. Forced to use a crutch for his crooked foot, bullied because of his past and tormented by childhood traumas and abusive relatives, Jarka is a very interesting and complex character. He's shrewd and his living on the streets taught him to be wary and careful, above of all when the power dynamics of the castle start to resemble those on the streets, in a plot full of mysteries, lies, plottings and where he finds himself involved, fighting to understand what's happening. He's able to grow, to fight against his fear and standing up for himself and those he loves.
The novel mixes elemental powers and politics. Jarka can read the wind and he's choosen to do it, he's training with Adrya, an interesting and stubborn character, mysterious and powerful at the King's side. Even though Jarka now lives in the castle he can't forget about his cousin Lyssa and her kid Izzy, who took care of him, until her husband beat him and forced him to leave. Torn between his love for them and the fear of her husband, Jarka is struggling to save the situation, further complicated by the kids' disappeareance and his suspicions toward a mysterious and suspected family.
Although Jarka sticks out in the novel because he's a fantastic main character, with a golden heart, stubborness, loyalty and the desire of fighting for his people against the rich's greed and powers, the side characters are very well written too. Besides Adrya, Ellyn and Lineth are captivating and complex. Lineth is a lady, daughter of a traitor and for that treated badly in the castle by the nobility and, at the same time, a brilliant and stubborn woman, who decided to run a refuge for homeless kids, helped by a young lady called Ellyn, with a troubled past and every reason to help Jarka stop the kids' disappereances.
In the novel both poor and rich struggles are underlined. Through Lyssa's eyes, forced to live with an abusive husband, the difficulty of get by, above all when the struggling one is a woman. Through Timur's, the same struggle, because of his granny's abuse and the difficulty of finding another place to live.
Jarka is right in the middle. Aware of the poor's struggles, able to gain a better life through his talent and shrewdness and willing to help those stuck in the city's "undergrounds", through the refuge, by lending an hand to Timur and Lyssa, by trying to protect them and the kids.
At the same time, the reader is able to see the castle's politics and the King's moves, who is trying to bind the nobles to him, by granting alliances, keeping eyes on them, moving his subjects like chess pieces', willing to overlook unspeakable evil to balance the powers and protect the kingdom.
The Stonebridge's situation highlighted a family's greed and violence at the expense of poor people, not considered by them, but seen only as a mean to get something.
One of the thing I found interesting is the stubborness and the willingness of the female characters of not letting others putting them in boxes. Daughter of a traitor, treated badly or shunned for a crime she didn't commit, Lineth is fabulous character, loyal, loving, sincere and fierce, able to stand up for herself and her love for Beran, the king's son. At the same time Adrya is a shrewd character, manipulative and full of secrets, loyal and powerful. Ellyn, even though she's scared of Jarka's powers, is willing to do anything to find the truth and the culprit, defending herself and those she loves.
Aware of this chess game, where the poor are usually victims of the powerful, Jarka is willing to risk everything to do the right thing, even losing everything he gained.
The elemental powers, the diving into ancient history, the secret passages, everything was really captivating and I devoured this book.
I recommend The Wysman to those willing to lose themselves in a captivating read, an interesting investigation, with complex, well written and thrilling characters.