BENEATH THE SUGAR SKY by Seanan McGuire – Review

I received this book for free from the Publisher in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

BENEATH THE SUGAR SKY by Seanan McGuire – ReviewBeneath the Sugar Sky by Seanan McGuire
Series: Wayward Children #3
Published by Tor.com on January 9 2018
Genres: Adult, Fantasy
Pages: 160
Format: eARC
Source: Publisher
Buy on Amazon
Goodreads
three-half-stars

The nitty-gritty: This story had some wonderfully magical elements and compelling characters, but as a whole it didn’t quite work for me.

“You were a mermaid, weren’t you? That’s what Nadya said.”

“I still am,” said Cora. “I just have my scales under my skin for now.”

It pains me to admit that I didn’t love this book nearly as much as the first two novellas in McGuire’s popular Wayward Children series. But I would be lying if I said it lived up to the dark and magical sense of wonder that I found in Every Heart a Doorway and Down Among the Sticks and Bones. Now don’t get me wrong, there were lots of things I loved about Beneath the Sugar Sky, but they were simply elements, and I had some issues with the haphazardness of the story.

In case you aren’t familiar with this series, the stories center around Eleanor West’s Home for Wayward Children, a way station for children who have discovered doors to other worlds, but for whatever reason they have been cast out of those worlds and ended up back in ours. These poor, displaced children, who all want desperately to get back to their worlds, end up with Eleanor West, who helps them cope with and assimilate back into the “real” world, even as they long to find a doorway that will take them home.

Beneath the Sugar Sky brings back several characters from the first book, so if you haven’t read Every Heart a Doorway, you may be a little confused. When the story begins, newcomer Cora and her friend Nadya are hanging out at the turtle pond—they both came from water worlds so they feel most comfortable being around water—when suddenly, a strange girl with candy corn eyes literally falls out of the sky into the pond. Rini has just come from a world called Confection, where everything is made out of candy and sugar. Rini announces that she is looking for her mother, but when the others hear that her mother’s name is Sumi, they know that’s impossible, because Sumi is dead.

What follows is a twisted quest to find the ghost of Sumi and bring her back to life—before Rini fades away, forever.

Part of the charm of this series is reading about all the wonderful magical worlds that the characters have been to, and in that respect, McGuire succeeds—sort of. I loved hearing about Cora’s mermaid world and Nadya’s drowned world called Belyyreka. Also, we get to visit Nancy (a character from Every Heart a Doorway) in the Land of the Dead, where her favorite thing in the world is to stand as still as a statue.

However, I think where this story faltered for me was when the characters made it to the world of Confection, a literal “Candyland” where EVERYTHING is made of sugar and candy. In Confection, the ocean is made of soda, clouds are made of cotton candy and there are fields of candy corn. I got both The Wizard of Oz and Alice in Wonderland vibes from their time in Confection and it just felt too sweet and precious to me. I missed the darkness of Down Among the Sticks and Bones, which was nowhere to be found this time around. Beneath the Sugar Sky was also lacking when it came to delivering an emotional punch. I just didn’t care about Rini’s plight (nor did I understand how she could exist when her mother was only a teen when she died?? There was some twisty time travel going on, I guess!) The characters journey from one land to another and it just never came together into a cohesive story for me, nor did I feel that they really learned anything by the end of their adventure.

What I did love about this story were the characters. Christopher came from the Land of the Dead, and he has the ability to command skeletons with his bone flute, which only the dead can hear. I loved this little detail and especially the fact that the bone is actually one of Christopher’s! Christopher is instrumental in helping Rini find Sumi, as he’s able to call up her skeleton from its burial place.

Cora and Nadya are new characters, and I loved both of them. McGuire loves to add messages to this series, and this time she uses Cora, who is overweight and has considered herself ugly her entire life, to emphasize that it’s what’s inside that matters, not what’s outside. I had a much more emotional connection to Cora than I did to Rini. My heart broke to read that when Cora fell into her mermaid world by accident, she suddenly became beautiful, but now that’s she’s been cast out, she feels just as ugly as she once believed herself to be. I do hope McGuire decides to go into more detail about Cora’s backstory at some point, because she’s definitely worth more page time.

As for Nadya, I won’t tell you too much, because if you do read the story you can discover all the cool things about her for yourself. I was left with the impression that the next novella in the series (assuming there is a next one??) is going to focus on Nadya and her Drowned World, and I can hardly wait.

This is a series that I highly recommend, even though Beneath the Sugar Sky is my least favorite story so far.

Big thanks to the publisher for supplying a review copy.

Posted January 5, 2018 by Tammy in 3 1/2 stars, Reviews / 23 Comments

Divider

23 responses to “BENEATH THE SUGAR SKY by Seanan McGuire – Review

  1. Thank you for a detailed and fair-minded review – as ever, it makes excellent reading. I read the first book in this novella series, but while I loved it I decided not to continue – I have so many other series I’m trying to complete/keep up with… But I have enjoyed following the story arc.

    • Tammy

      I know what you mean, there are just TOO many books to read everything. You do have to pick and choose.

  2. I agree that this book felt a little more scattered, but I liked that it had the feeling of a nonsense world woven into it. I understand that that doesn’t work for everyone though! Also, Seanan McGuire has 2-3 more books planned for the series, they just haven’t announced them yet 🙂
    Liz H. recently posted…Waiting on Wednesday: January 2018 ReleasesMy Profile

    • Tammy

      Oooh I’m so excited! I knew it was going to be a longer series, and I’m pretty sure I know who the next book is going to focus on. Thanks for the heads up!

  3. The overall darkness of the second book in this series did indeed make me appreciate it more than its predecessor, so I’m a little worried, reading your review, that I will miss that fundamental bleakness that is the best staple of McGuire’s writing. Still, forewarned is forearmed and some dimmed expectations might work in my favor… Thanks for sharing! 🙂
    Maddalena@spaceandsorcery recently posted…PLANETARY AWARDS 2017My Profile

  4. I have this preordered for my Kindle and I think I will enjoy it, but I am glad I read your review because I’ll try not to set my expectations too high. I have to admit, when I read “candy corn” eyes my minds instantly started singing “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds.” I love McGuire but I guess it would be too much to find all of her work perfect!

    • Tammy

      Ha ha, for some reason the whole “candy” thing just didn’t work for me. It was too silly.

    • Tammy

      There’s bound to be dips in the series, and I guess this is it for me. Hopefully she’s back to more of the darkness I enjoy for the next one:-)

  5. I really loved the darkness and the eerie tone of Down Among The Sticks and Bones so I also might not like Beneath The Sugar Skyas much… I will be picking it up on audio because I appreciate McGuire way more out loud because it forces me to take my take and immerse myself in her writing! 🙂

    • Tammy

      A lot of readers loved this, so maybe it was just me. But really it’s still a wonderful series!

  6. There are always dips in series I suppose so I’m not too discouraged (although obviously I would have liked to have seen a glowing review). I’ve only read the first but I’ll catch up at some point.
    Lynn 😀

    • Tammy

      It’s definitely hard to keep a long series going strong for every book. I did hear there are at least two more books coming, so hopefully she’ll bounce back.

Leave a Reply to Tammy Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.