And with this library book, I’ve read all of Tara Sim’s novels. Which. Feels weird, honestly. After the Scavenge the Stars Duology, I’m definitely interested in where Sim goes next.
Picking up soon after Scavenge the Stars ended, Ravage the Dark follows our queer crew’s investigation into counterfeits coins and the plague they carry. Cayo struggles to support Soria as being alive costs so much money. Reeling from Boon’s betrayal, Amaya needs new flesh in which to stab her knife, and Liesl, Deadshot, Avi, and newcomer Jasper are more than happy to provide targets. Remy threatens to tear his hair out when the crew consistently has the worst ideas. Nevertheless, this motley group is determined to bring justice to the land—and make the more difficult decision of what form that justice will take.
Strengths of the first book carry over to this one. The plot is exemplary. Twist after twist, layer after layer: all delivered with an intoxicating swiftness. I took a brief break from the book, but when I came back, I was sucked right back in like no time had passed at all. I was utterly engrossed. Sim mentions in the Acknowledgements that she planned the plague plot before COVID-19, but God, did she nail the plague year experience on the head. The future is written on the subway walls.
One plot point that keeps bugging me was why the group doesn’t pay for Soria’s medicine. Experiencing manual labor is necessary for Cayo’s character growth, but there’s a weird contrast. The group has no money problems, and the investigation doesn’t take all day every day. Amaya has hours of staring out the window angsting. Liesel doesn’t mention needing to take odd jobs for food. Yet Cayo takes up two jobs during the day and helps the group, and no one wants to help save his dying sister? There might have been a one-liner explanation of why, but I missed it. The decision seemed pretty cold-hearted for an otherwise compassionate friend group.
Outside of that plot point, the characters become more themselves, if that makes sense. They grapple with the world and themes, and I rooted for them all the way. One critique I had of the later books in the Timekeeper Trilogy was the cast became too unwieldy—Sim took too obvious of pains to introduce everyone, provide a reason for them to be present, and give the reader a reason to care. Here, our heroes are kept to a minimum, so I got to love each one. And, for the record, there are no cishets in this universe, which makes me colon capital D.
And whoa!!! The romance is so good y’all. Cayo and Amaya are OTP material. It’s an absolute treat to watch them grow into one another, to fit their messes together and find healing. I really want the Scavenge the Stars Duology to be a mini-series or Netflix movie because gaaaHHHH, what I wouldn’t give to externalize the vision that is Amaya/Cayo.
Until then, I’ll enjoy the books. I’m super excited to read Sim’s upcoming The City of Dusk.