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African Americans. Juvenile fiction.
Magic. Juvenile fiction.
Racism. Juvenile fiction.
African Americans. Fiction.
Magic. Fiction.
Racism. Fiction.
Starred Review The author of Dread Nation (2018) is at the top of her game in this endlessly inventive, dark historical fantasy. In 1937, Laura Ann Langston, 17, moves to Manhattan to obtain a mage's license and start a confectionery business. The color of her skin ura's Black kes that difficult, so she applies to the Bureau of the Arcane's Conservation Corps, Colored Auxiliary. She is apprenticed to Skylark, a female agent with big secrets, who takes her to be named. Laura becomes the Peregrine powerful name for a strong-willed girl with more abilities than she knows. But Prohibition dictates that each mage work only one discipline, and Peregrine is a Floramancer who creates using growing things, often nuts or seeds. Floramancy is only one of several traditional disciplines, and it is practiced by Black mages and scorned by the white Mechomancers. All mages tap into the energy of the Dynamism, but Mechomancers also draw on Death (i.e., fossil fuels), resulting in corrupted, terrifying Blight zones. When Skylark's team is assigned to repair the Ohio Blight, they encounter a great evil. Complex world building rooted in dark events of American history (the Tulsa race massacre, the rise of the Ku Klux Klan, environmental destruction) is leavened by humor (talking unicorns, a mage who turns into a cat) and a pace that rarely lags. The sheer breadth of imagination on display is extraordinary.
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews (Thu Aug 04 00:00:00 CDT 2022)A queer Black mage with a simple dream learns she is destined for far greater adventures.Laura Ann Langston just wants to be an influential baker. However, 1937 America cares little about her sweet ambitions or that she traveled from a country town in Pennsylvania to New York City to make it happen. Several months in, Laura is flat broke with nowhere to call home, leading her to join the Bureau of the Arcane's Conservation Corps. Laura is recruited by the formidable agent Skylark, head of the Colored Auxiliary's regional Floramancy Division. After other areas' teams go missing, Laura and Skylark set out on an ominous mission to the Ohio Deep Blight, a zone experiencing unnatural phenomena that have disastrous effects on people and animals. There, they use their capacity to control the Dynamism, an energy field that mages pull from. It's there that Laura also uncovers a conspiracy and gains insight into the depths of her power. Readers are thrust into complex worldbuilding with familiar parallels to our world. Ireland makes advanced concepts accessible, and old photos, articles, and investigative reports bolster her uncanny ability to weave painful, real history into this new world. The bold narrative, told through Laura's first-person and Skylark's third-person perspectives, culminates in a captivating ending that eerily echoes many of the issues that presently plague the country, describing the destructive nature of capitalism and the impact its oppression wreaks on a nation.Insightful, admirable, and well executed. (author's note, photo credits) (Historical fantasy. 14-18)
School Library Journal Starred Review (Sat Oct 01 00:00:00 CDT 2022)Gr 8 Up— Laura Ann Langstan is a queer Black girl growing up in an alternate 1930s America. In this world, the mystical arts can be practiced, but only with a license, and Laura seeks hers by joining the Bureau of the Arcane's Conservation Corps in New York as an apprentice to a mysterious woman named Skylark. As the two go on a mission into the oldest Blight in America to fix the corruption to the area, they discover there is more to Laura than anyone, including Laura herself, previously thought. Ireland seamlessly weaves historical events with the mystical world she created, making the fantasy of this book feel very real and fleshed out. This work puts a much-needed perspective into YA historical fiction and does not hold back when examining America's dark past of racism and exploitation. The cast of characters is almost entirely Black and has LGBTQIA+ representation in Laura as well as Malik, a boy in the Conservation Corps. This book is exciting, with a litany of in-depth characters that readers will love. VERDICT This novel tackles important social issues while providing an exciting and fast-paced adventure that's hard to put down. Highly recommended for any YA collection.— Carleigh Obrochta
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)A queer Black mage with a simple dream learns she is destined for far greater adventures.Laura Ann Langston just wants to be an influential baker. However, 1937 America cares little about her sweet ambitions or that she traveled from a country town in Pennsylvania to New York City to make it happen. Several months in, Laura is flat broke with nowhere to call home, leading her to join the Bureau of the Arcane's Conservation Corps. Laura is recruited by the formidable agent Skylark, head of the Colored Auxiliary's regional Floramancy Division. After other areas' teams go missing, Laura and Skylark set out on an ominous mission to the Ohio Deep Blight, a zone experiencing unnatural phenomena that have disastrous effects on people and animals. There, they use their capacity to control the Dynamism, an energy field that mages pull from. It's there that Laura also uncovers a conspiracy and gains insight into the depths of her power. Readers are thrust into complex worldbuilding with familiar parallels to our world. Ireland makes advanced concepts accessible, and old photos, articles, and investigative reports bolster her uncanny ability to weave painful, real history into this new world. The bold narrative, told through Laura's first-person and Skylark's third-person perspectives, culminates in a captivating ending that eerily echoes many of the issues that presently plague the country, describing the destructive nature of capitalism and the impact its oppression wreaks on a nation.Insightful, admirable, and well executed. (author's note, photo credits) (Historical fantasy. 14-18)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)Ireland (
Starred Review ALA Booklist (Tue Nov 01 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews (Thu Aug 04 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
Starred Review for Publishers Weekly
School Library Journal Starred Review (Sat Oct 01 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
Horn Book (Thu Oct 03 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
The author of the visionary New York Times bestseller Dread Nation returns with another spellbinding historical fantasy set at the crossroads of race and power in America.
It is 1937, and Laura Ann Langston lives in an America divided—between those who work the mystical arts and those who do not. Ever since the Great Rust, a catastrophic event that blighted the arcane force called the Dynamism and threw America into disarray, the country has been rebuilding for a better future. And everyone knows the future is industry and technology—otherwise known as Mechomancy—not the traditional mystical arts.
Laura disagrees. A talented young queer mage from Pennsylvania, Laura hopped a portal to New York City on her seventeenth birthday with hopes of earning her mage’s license and becoming something more than a rootworker.
But four months later, she’s got little to show for it other than an empty pocket and broken dreams. With nowhere else to turn, Laura applies for a job with the Bureau of the Arcane’s Conservation Corps, a branch of the US government dedicated to repairing the Dynamism so that Mechomancy can thrive. There she meets the Skylark, a powerful mage with a mysterious past, who reluctantly takes Laura on as an apprentice.
As they’re sent off on their first mission together into the heart of the country’s oldest and most mysterious Blight, they discover the work of mages not encountered since the darkest period in America’s past, when Black mages were killed for their power—work that could threaten Laura’s and the Skylark’s lives, and everything they’ve worked for.