More like a 4.5, but I'm rounding up because it's the authors debut. How does someone just start writing and then write something this good straight away? I'm jealous.
Interesting premise. A book that is certainly not for the faint-hearted.
It's a middle-grade novel, supposedly aimed at children from the age of 9 upwards, but I'd say the sweet spot to read this would be age 12, in my opinion (although I have just thoroughly enjoyed it myself at age 20). It's got... not exactly gore, but definite mentions of blood and guts in places.
This book has it's own map of The City, which I loved but honestly didn't use all that often. The book carried itself perfectly without needing a map, but the map was definitely a nice touch.
The story is that in this world, there were a lot of (presumably cocky) gods who decided to drown the world of people entirely, but there was an Enemy god among them (think Loki) who actually tricked them all into drowning themselves, too. So now the world is left with no gods except The Enemy, and a whole lot of seawater.
The City is a mishmash of the last surviving people, living on a jagged mountain that just about made it through the flood. But they all live in perpetual fear of The Enemy, who still very much exists and wishes to cause havoc.
The Enemy is a kind of parasite who grows within the mind of a Vessel, which is a human he can communicate and interact with, until he becomes powerful enough to shed the human's body and take on his true and terrible form. So as you can imagine, this does cause quite a lot of commotion for the inhabitants of The City, because they're constantly on the lookout for the next Vessel so they can kill it in human form, before The Enemy has time to become powerful.
So when a whale washes up on top of a church and a boy crawls out from its belly, you can imagine how the already-and-always-terrified town reacts.
Ellie is also at the scene when this boy is discovered. She's convinced he's not the Vessel, and that they're about to kill an innocent boy as a mistake. She just needs to work out how she, 13 years old and extremely disorganised, can save this boy and work out who he really is, instead.
I loved Ellie as the main character of this novel. She's messy, brilliant and bad-tempered at times, and I just think that's such an accurate kind of character - it warms my heart. Her best friend Anna steals the show quite a bit - she's every bit as complex and desperately important to the storyline, and never comes across as a side-kick, not really. I liked the friendships and the way the characters interact - sometimes, they're really arguing and they're all making mistakes and they're all just so human and intensely likeable.
Another thing I like about this book is the attention to detail. The City became such a real place for me while I was reading, and small, seemingly insignificant details mentioned early on in the story came back round and played their part later. I love it when an author leaves a trail like that, like they're laying out individual parts and pieces down and by the end of the book you have a whole completed jigsaw puzzle, so to speak.
Maybe it was because we've hardly had internet for the last two days, but I genuinely think it was down to some very skillful writing: I got completely lost in this book, like I haven't been able to in a long time. Since March last year my concentration span has gone out the window but this book demanded my attention and kept me guessing. I really, really liked this story.
Reason it's actually 4.5? It's a bit wordy in places. The descriptions made it slow going to get into the beginning of the book. But that's honestly such a minor issue, I'm not even complaining.
Also, can we talk about this BEAUTIFUL cover art?! I can't stop looking at it.