I read this book last week, after receiving the book from NetGalley for review. Shortly after receiving the book the publisher approached me about hosting a giveaway for this new book. That made me want to hold off on posting my review for this book until the giveaway. For your Chance to win, all you have to do is leave a comment on this blog post. :)
Mini Review:
I quite enjoyed the book. The concept was really interesting and unique. As were the characters. It did take me a little while to really get into the world since the dialog was not something I am used to reading. To be honest I did have some issues with this book, but it was an enjoyable read, and I would recommend it to others.
Book Blurb:
"Jacob Greene was a sweet boy raised by a loving, tight-knit family…of cultists. He always obeyed, and was so trusted by them that he was the one they sent out on their monthly supply run (food, medicine, pig fetuses, etc.).
Finding himself betrayed by them, he flees the family’s sequestered compound and enters the true unknown: college in New York City. It’s a very foreign place, the normal world and St. Mark’s University. But Jacob’s looking for a purpose in life, a way to understand people, and a future that breaks from his less-than-perfect past. However, when his estranged sister arrives in town to kick off the apocalypse, Jacob realizes that if he doesnt gather allies and stop the family’s prophecy of destruction from coming true, nobody else will…"
Excerpt from book:
CHAPTER
THIRTEEN
I’d
never met
lycanthropes
before.
There were
no packs
in the
Dakotas.
My father
and
grandmother
had seen
to that
years
ago.
I was
starting to
understand
why.
Our
family’s
sorcerous
might was
unmatched, but
a wolf moving through thick brush,
especially
with a
pack at
her back,
could make
quick work
of an
unprepared
sorcerer,
unless the
sorcerer
was
willing to
bring down
an entire
forest to
protect
themselves.
It’s
what
Grandmother
had done.
One of
the many
races
made by
the gods
in the
first days,
lycanthropes
could move
among
humans
without
notice,
only
revealing
their power
when they
wished.
When their
creator,
the moon,
was
strongest, so
were they.
Antoinette
cleared her
throat. “I
am
Antoinette
Laroux. And
a friend
told me
to show
you this.”
She
produced
the
Nataraja
statue,
holding it
out in
the scant
inches
between
herself and
the looming
wolf-woman.
The
woman
chuffed
once,
very canine
in that
moment, all
pretense of
humanity
cast aside.
She looked
Antoinette
dead in
the eyes,
then sized
her up,
gaze going
to her
feet and
then
94 Michael
R.
Underwood
back
up to
her eyes.
She took
a single
step back.
“So you
know the
Nephilim.
Fine.
Why are
you here?”
“Someone’s
after the
Hearts.
She’s
trying to
awaken
the
Younger
Gods.”
The wolves
snarled as
one.All
of them,
the woman
included.
“And
you’re
here,
what, to
warn
us? As
if we
aren’t
always
on guard?
There’s
precious
little of
the earth
left in
this place.
You
think we
aren’t
always
vigilant?”
“We
want
to help,”
I said,
breaking
with
Antoinette’s
request.
The
woman
snapped at
me,
baring her
teeth. “You
smell of
the Deeps,
boy.”
Again,
judged
before I
was
known. Even
thousands
of miles
away
from my
family’s
center of
power,
I was
just a
Greene to
them. Even
if I
bested
Esther,
would I
ever be
rid of
that stain,
or would
I carry
it with
me my
whole life,
my family’s
sins
painted
clearly
across my
face with
the
distinctively
bland look
of our
family?
“We’ve
had a
long day
already,”
Antoinette
said, by
way
of
explanation.
“But he’s
right.
We’re
trying to
get the
whole city
to join
up so
we can
stop this
woman. She’s
ridiculously
powerful.”
“Her
power means little here,”
the woman said.
“Her power
comes from
the Deeps,
but this
is the
horizon,
the union
of earth
and sky,
and we
are
protected.”
“Tell
that to
the Hidatsa
and Arikara
packs,”
I said.
They’d
been the
last two
to give
up the
fight. The
Hidatsa had
fled west.
The Arikara
had been
eradicated.
More
snarls.
“We
are not
them.
But we
take your
offer as
it is
intended,
THE YOUNGER GODS 95
in recognition
of the
Nephilim’s
friendship
to our
pack. Go.
This island
is
sacrosanct.
Help the
others,
and when
the time
comes,
call for
us and we
will be
there.
Our fangs
will tear
her throat
and spill
her
lifeblood.
It will
be washed
away
by the
Hudson and
her stain
sent out
to sea.”
A
cheery
sort, this
one.
I could
just
imagine
what she’s
like at
parties.
“Care
for
some
juice?”
“I
will
rip
this
cup
to
broken
shreds
and
see
its
ruin
smote
upon
the
mountain.”
“Chips?”
“No,
thank
you.”
Perhaps
not.
“Thank you
for your
time,”
Antoinette
said. “How
will we
call you?”
The
woman
reached
into her
sweatshirt,
and
produced a
spent
exoskeleton.
Cicada,
possibly a
grasshopper.
I’d
always
been an
indoor
child.
“Crush
this
beneath
your boot
and we
will know.”
“Will
you know
where as
well?”
The woman
snarled at
me.
“We
will know.”
I elected
not to
probe
further,
trusting
the
wolf-woman’s
confidence.
Antoinette
accepted
the
exoskeleton,
handling it
with care
and sliding
it into
the pocket
with the
Shiva
Nataraja
statue.
“Thank you
for your
time.
We
will go
now.”
The
woman
nodded, and
another
wave
of shadows
passed over
her,
leaving
behind the
wolf she
had been
before.
In
an
unexpected
act of
kindness,
the wolves
led us
to another
way
down the
hill, such
that we
were able
to leave
the park
with no
more
bruises and
scrapes.
96 Michael
R.
Underwood
When we
were out
of earshot
of the
pack (or,
when I
assumed we
were,
the exact
details of
supernal
wolf
hearing being an area
outside my expertise),
I released
the hold on
my tongue.
“Why did
she speak
that way?”
I asked.
Antoinette
raised
an eyebrow.
“You’re
one to
ask.”
“I am
asking.
That speech
pattern is
not
familiar to
me.
I had
been
informed
that the
filmic
depictions
of Native
American
speech were
inaccurate,
but her
speech was
neither
that
stereotype
nor
anything
with which
I am
familiar.”
“She’s
a wolf,
Jake.”
“A
lycanthrope,
yes.
I assume
they all
are.
Is that
typical of
the local
group? A
tribal
cant,
then?”
“Everybody’s
got a
dialect.
They don’t
talk to
people
much, from
what I
can tell.”
“But
how will
we know
if we
don’t
ask?” I
prodded,
struck by
Antoinette’s
lack of
curiosity.
Some would
call it
prudence.
But I’d
never been
the one
to stop
until I’d
gotten to
the bottom
of
something.
Be that
turning the
basement
until I
found the
frequently-cited
text that
was
somehow not
on the
bookshelves,
or waiting
and
listening
at the
door until
Mother and
Father
thought
we’d
all gone
to bed
so they
could
resume
their
fights.
“I
don’t
really
care.
I’m not
the
needs-to-know
everything type.
That was
more my
mom’s
bag.”
We
arrived at
the bus
stop.
A woman
joined us,
old before
her time,
with a
multicolored
heap of
plastic
bags in
a laundry
cart. We
suspended
our
conversation,
dwelling in
silence as
my mind
continued
to race.
I checked
my watch
several
times over
the course
of the
same
minute,
then turned
to
Antoinette.
“Have
you heard
anything
from
Carter?”
THE YOUNGER GODS 97
She shook
her head.
“Don’t
worry,
Jake.
We
have
time.”
I was
not so
optimistic.
After
seven
minutes of
fidgeting
and
feeling
helpless,
the bus
appeared,
which led
directly
into
another
fifty-two
minutes of
powerlessness.
But with
the space
in the
bus,
I felt
comfortable
drawing
out one
of the
texts I’d
borrowed
from
Antoinette’s
store and
refreshing
my
familiarity
with
agate/ruby
sympathetic
connections
and their
applications
in combat.
The
peridot
would be
my greatest
asset in
any combat
against
creatures
of the
Deeps,
but I
would be
well
advised to
take a
versatile
approach,
perhaps
happen upon
a
configuration
unexpected
to Esther
and catch
her
unawares.
She was
a natural,
and had
never
needed to
study as
I had.
Her power
was
unquestioned,
but she
was
sometimes
shortsighted.
On
the ferry
trip back,
we found a
corner of
the deck
sufficiently remote
to speak
freely,
working
through
various
scenarios—if
Esther had
already
claimed
this Heart
and that
one,
this is
what she
could do,
and so
on. She
had perhaps
three of the
Hearts at
most, one
at the
least. Antoinette’s
connections
in the
Bronx were
not
extensive.
If she
had three,
the second
circle
would be
opened
soon, and
the city
would take
notice.
My
seasickness
was
not as
pronounced
as on
the trip
over,
but I
still found
prudence in
fixing my
gaze on
the
horizon,
the vision
locked into
my mind
to help
convince my
inner ear
that we
were not
about to
be hurtled
into the
sea or
whatever it
was
about the
rolling
motion of
the water
that
unsettled
my
equilibrium.
“That place
is a
battlefield,”
she’d
said by
way
of
explanation.
“We
go there
next, then.
She may
hope to
use our
reticence
98 Michael
R.
Underwood
against
us.
But what
about
Queens?”
“The Raksha
in Queens
are very
capable,
and even
more
secretive.
Queens is
a big
place,
and the
Raksha have
full
cooperation
of the
entire
community.
People
live in
Queens to
be safe,
not for
ambition.”
“That
seems somewhat reductive,”
I said.
Antoinette
shrugged.
“Not
everything
I say
has to
be the
gospel
truth, you
know.
This isn’t
a trial.”
I
blanched at
the
comment.
“But why
dissemble?”
“It was
a turn
of phrase,
for
emphasis.
I think
you’re
right about
the Bronx.
It’ll
take Esther
longer to
pin down
the Bearer
in Queens,
so it
seems only smart that she’d
head north
first.”
“Excellent.
I would
be amenable
to stopping
for lunch
somewhere
on the
way.
Preferably
after my
stomach has
settled
again from
the ferry
ride.”
Antoinette
nodded, her
gaze
turning out
to the
water.
I wished
that my
stomach or
the water
would be
calm enough
to resume
my reading.
It was
nervous
distraction,
but still
far better
than
queasiness
for my
nerves.
Instead,
my mind
drifted to
Esther,
spinning
out
scenarios
of the
people she
could be
hurting
this very
moment, the
carnage she
could be
tearing
through
this city
while eight
million
people moved around her,
ignorant
of the
coming storm.
I know you are holding off on your review but does The Younger Gods have a Twilight feel to it? I always fear that when it comes to books with vampire or werewolves.
ReplyDeleteIt doesn't give me any kind of vibe. There is actually zero romance in this book.
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