The River Has Roots by Amal El-MohtarMy rating: 5 of 5 stars
This book surprised the heck out of me. I went into it basically cold, knowing nothing about it--and closed the back cover on a beautiful story, wonderfully told.
This is a fantasy that has the feel of a fairy tale centuries old, a maybe-true story that has passed into myth and legend, and still has so much to say. At its heart it's the tale of the love between sisters, and how that love will transcend time and even death. It also casts its magic in the structure of grammar and the language of music, with lush, supple prose. Just look at this paragraph:
Most music is the result of some intimacy with an instrument. One wraps one's mouth around a whistle and pours one's breath into it; one all but lays one's cheek against a violin; and skin to skin is holy drummer's kiss. But a harp is played most like a lover: you learn to lean its body against your breast, find those places of deepest, stiffest tension with your hands and finger them into quivering release. You rock together, forward and back; your left hand keeps a base rhythm while your right weaves a melody through it, and they flutter past each other as the music becomes more complex, swells, breaks, shakes the body of your instrument in joy and grief alike, in the wild, wonderful grammar of being alive.
There are songs in this book, in the mode of Loreena McKennitt's take on the old English ballad "The Bonny Swans"--murder ballads, they're called, and the protagonist uses one to reveal her murderer, the man who drowned her for her land and sent her to Faerie--here known as Arcadia. This is Esther Hawthorn, who loved a Fae--here named Rin, but who seems to be Mab, the Queen of Air and Darkness. Esther's sister is Ysabel, the younger of the two, who works with Esther to guard the two willow trees, the Professors, watching over the magical River Liss, the river that flows out of Arcadia. The River Liss brings magical "grammar" to the human world, and human witches "conjugate" it into many useful things.
Esther is being courted by one Samuel Pollard, and turns him down because she has fallen in love with Rin. In a jealous rage, Samuel drowns her in the river, but because of her ties to Rin (a betrothal ring) the River Liss flows backwards and delivers Esther's body into Arcadia. There she is reawakened into life, but because she died on the other side, she can only return to the human world in a different form. She asks Rin to make her into a harp, and when Rin brings her back to her parents' house where Pollard has shifted his attentions to Ysabel, Esther sings a murder ballad of identification and Pollard is exposed. Then she has to go back with Rin into Faerie, but before they leave Rin gives Ysabel a hint on how she can find a hidden entrance and sing her way back in--and years later, Ysabel does just that, bringing herself and her young child into the Fae-lands, and the sisters are reunited at last.
It's a simple enough tale, but it has a lovely timelessness. There is even an "I" narrator who is never identified, and in the end who the narrator might be (Ysabel's child, maybe?) doesn't matter. I was completely caught up in the story of Esther and Ysabel. This book is simply gorgeous, and you owe it to yourself to read it.
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