I received an ARC from Edelweiss
TW:
harassment & mobs, home invasion, fire/arson, gun violence
3.5
Darling is a strange place- but most people don't know that. Only Delta and her family, living on the outskirts of town, know how odd things really are, with their house that seems alive and the door their father disappeared into months ago. But nothing has ever been less ordinary than the thing that fell out of the sky, right passed their backyard. What they thought was a meteor is a boy, a creature not quite human, who cannot go home and cannot stay here, where suspicion has already led more than one person in search of him.
I really love the lushness of this book, the way the magic is portrayed, the whole concept behind this story. But I wanted to like it more than I actually did,
The magic in this book reminded me of a mix of Good Omens and children's stories, and it felt like watching the cogs in a machine you'll never see the whole of move. I love the hints of strangeness, I love the way the house itself senses their moods, keeping them in a bubble no one will ever truly be able to make their way into. It's very atmospheric, which made it lovely to read.
And the concept sounded fantastic. The comparison to Edward Scissorhands only really lasts through the first few chapters, but I love a good small town disrupted by the unexplainably odd. And there were plenty of little pieces that were great to watch, decisions that made the book feel more real.
But there were so many things I just could not buy. And part of that is because this book isn't marketed right.
Right off the bat I knew this book was going to be different than I had been told- a magical realism, quiet story of magic and change. Instead, it's a sci-fi book with all the trappings of juvenile sci-fi. Which isn't a bad thing, but not what I expected to be getting into. When I think of people falling from the sky I think "Stardust", but this was more like ET.
I also feel, personally, that this would have been a more interesting book with fewer POVs. The second I realized we were getting Starling's POV I lost some interest, I felt less tension, and I liked him a whole lot less, because you can't avoid while reading his thoughts the fact that he is pretentious and talks like an immortal vampire.
Part of that complaint is, yes, that I don't like Starling- which I really, really did not- but I also just feel the focus on Delta was much more interesting and the lack of certainty between everyone gave the book a needed tension that you can't have when you're in everyone's heads.
I also wish the magic was more prevalent. It shows up in hints and shimmers, but I was waiting for the magic to take center stage, or, if not, become part of some explanation. But it felt more incidental. I also wanted more of an explanation for the town as whole, since it seemed to be painted with a pretty broad, cliche brush.
I also wasn't a fan of the two most important things to Delta- the romance, and Bee. Bee was so irritating for literally the entire book. How she decided to be annoying did change throughout, but using her as an obstacle and part-antagonist for the whole story made it very hard to connect to her or Delta's feelings towards her. As for the romance, I didn't like it because, as I've said, I didn't like Starling, he read as a pretentious immortal, and I just saw no good reason for him to be interested in her at all and still be that distant and other- and clearly think himself above all humans. I am not a fan of romances where the people involves see themselves on dramatically different levels, and I am also not a romance between teen girls and big, powerful, immortal-adjacent men.
I think that this author could do some great things, she obviously has good ideas and an enchanting writing style. But there were too many things I couldn't get into or rubbed me the wrong way for this to be the book for me.
Pre-review comments below
That cover 😳 That premise 😳 So glad I snagged an arc!