Full disclosure: I managed to get my grubby hands on an ARC!
Exiting exotic Urban Fantasy set in Ethiopia
The long-awaited and for the time being last Ben and Tenzin adventure. This is the fifth and final book in the Elemental Legacy series, which is a spin-off of Elizabeth Hunter’s hugely addictive Elemental Mystery and Elemental World books.
The title-giving Bone Scroll is this mythological object of vampire lore that is supposed to confer the power to control all four (five) elements on the one that holds it (or rather, the one that manages to decipher it). After it has lain hidden and mostly forgotten for centuries, now rumors of its existence suddenly abound. Tenzin is alerted by her sire who fears for the balance of the vampire world, if any one vampire should gain so much power. Though several obstacles present themselves right from the beginning, like the scarcity of reliable documentation about the scroll, the fact that they are not the only ones looking for it and the fact that its most likely hiding place is somewhere smack in the middle of Saba’s territory, Ben and Tenzin have never been able to resist a good treasure hunt. But the stakes have never been so high, as the holder of the scroll would become more powerful than even Saba, who is the oldest vampires of them all…
As a bookish reader (that sounds a bit like a tautology, but you know what I mean) one of the pleasures of this series for me derives from the way of how the stories are driven by research, on the one hand on the level of the plot, where the protagonists follow references painstakingly gleaned from historical documents and by consulting specialists, and on the other hand from the research the author has undertaken to imbue the story with a rich historical, geographic and cultural fabric. Although it might sound a bit contradictory, it’s this attention to detail that makes Elizabeth Hunter’s books appear so real/realistic; despite the fact they belong to the realm of the paranormal, the fantastical, they read almost like magical realism. But never fear; there aren’t any lengthy place descriptions or large information dumps, rather Elizabeth Hunter succeeds in weaving it all seamlessly together, so that for instance you feel the night in Addis Ababa pulse around you as Ben and Tenzin step off the plane or you feel awed by the sublimeness of the rock churches in Lalibela, even as our protagonists are in a race to find the Bone Scroll first.
On a meta-level you come to realize that Africa has a rich and long cultural history which contradicts the view historically held in the West of Africa as a mostly white (empty) spot on the map, without a history and culture of its own before the European colonizers arrived (a view that is being challenged by a post-colonial approach in various fields of study, a critique that also subtly underlies the whole book…)
It was exciting to see favorite characters from the series pop up, as well as have new characters introduced that hopefully in the future will get their own story. And I loved that Beatrice, Gio and Sadie got to accompany Ben and Tenzin on this adventure, mostly to lend them an air of respectability, though Sadie did provide an instrumental clue.
At the conclusion of Dawn Caravan Ben and Tenzin were actually in a good place in their relationship, but it was good to see how they were still growing together and settling into each other’s lives and habits as a couple. This is not “and they lived happily for ever” (because eternity after all is a rather long time), but they are happy for now and the ending leaves open the possibility for more stories in the future, though the story arc of how they found to each other is finished.
I devoured it, loved it, so 5+ stars.