The storyteller

Traci Chee

Book - 2018

"Sefia is determined to keep Archer out of the Guard's clutches and their plans for war between the Five Kingdoms. The Book, the ancient, infinite codex of the past, present and future, tells of a prophecy that will plunge Kelanna in that bloody war, but it requires a boy--Archer--and Sefia will stop at nothing to ensure his safety. The Guard has already stolen her mother, her father, and her Aunt Nin. Sefia would sooner die than let them take anymore from her--especially the boy she loves. But escaping the Guard and the Book's prophecy is no easy task. After all, what is written always comes to pass. As Sefia and Archer watch Kelanna start to crumble to the Guard's will, they will have to choose between their love and j...oining a war that just might tear them apart. Full of magic, suspense, and mystery, Traci Chee brings her Sea of Ink and Gold trilogy to a close in this spellbinding final installment."--Amazon.com.

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Subjects
Genres
Action and adventure fiction
Fantasy fiction
Romance fiction
Published
New York, NY : G.P. Putnam's Sons [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Traci Chee (author)
Physical Description
525 pages : illustrations, map ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780399176791
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Sefia knows that if Archer leads the bloodletters, he will fulfill the Book's prophecy of dying. She is desperate to find a way to rewrite the future, but she can no longer trust the Book. Meanwhile, King Eduoar has succeeded in faking his death, only to have his lover lead Deliene into war. As the Alliance travels the seas to overthrow the five kingdoms, the secondary characters' stories shine. Eduoar becomes Ed, and for the first time, he feels he can make a difference. Captain Reed is desperate to find the fabled Resurrection Amulet before his own prophesied death. Tanin, once a friend to Sefia's parents and now a mortal enemy, has fallen from grace among the Guardians and is still on a bloodthirsty hunt to possess the Book at whatever cost. Lastly, there is a new character, the Storyteller, who has always been lurking in the background, watching and waiting. In this richly realized novel, Chee has masterfully converged all of her characters into one final confrontation. Advise readers to bring a box of tissues for the final hundred pages, as Chee pulls out all the stops to beautifully obliterate her readers' hearts. Epilogue chapters explain the aftermath and wrap up all loose ends. While Sefia and Archer's story may finally be finished, the ending leaves hope that Chee will return to the world of Kelanna in the future.--Lindsey Tomsu Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 7 Up-In this final installment of the trilogy, Sefia and Archer have formed a plan to elude the Red War and save Archer's life. Soon after, Sefia realizes she must change course and reluctantly relies on the Book for guidance. She ultimately decides that the Book is not to be trusted. After several failed strategies to stop the Red War from spreading, the heroine uses a complicated form of magic that will allow her to take control of the story by rewriting the past. This series ender finds a determined Sefia working hard to change her destiny, even if she must lie and betray friends. Readers will feel her desperation and her sorrow through Chee's immersive writing. The author even provides teens the opportunity to impact the narrative and the protagonists' fates. This is a fast-paced adventure with fully developed characters that explores memory and the power of the written word. Readers will also be pulled in by the beautiful love story at its core. VERDICT Highly recommended for all collections.-Dawn Abron, Zion-Benton Public Library, IL © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review

In this trilogy-ender, Sefia, Archer, and their allies fight to avert a prophecy, thereby ending war and saving Archer's life--but the prophetic Book may itself be working against them. The many interwoven story lines all involve high-stakes action, impossible choices, love, loss, and magic; Chee brings them to a heartwrenching but satisfying close with characteristically vivid world-building, a diverse cast of characters, and intriguing metafictional elements. (c) Copyright 2019. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

"What is written comes to pass"or does it?In this trilogy closer, Sefia struggles to help Archer escape his destiny, written in the Book that records Kelanna's history, past and future. Archer has been severely traumatized by his time as a candidate, when he was shaped by the secretive Guard into a human killing machine who would lead their unstoppable army to victory in the Red War, so it's Sefia who doggedly works to "rewrit[e] the future." Their doomedmaybelove story plays out: against the backdrop of the Red War, as the Alliance engineered by the Guard grows ever closer to its goal; in tandem with outlaw Capt. Reed's quest for immortality; alongside Eduoar's escape from his former life as Lonely King of Deliene. Chee (The Speaker, 2017, etc.) keeps all her stories in balance, adding additional characters as they all converge toward a bloody, heartbreaking end. With an assurance that equals her sorcerer protagonist's, Chee constantly interrogates her central question: "who controls the story." At one point hers reaches the high-fantasy equivalent of The Monster at the End of This Book (though with significantly more elegance). Kelanna has racial diversity, but it is not racialized. Race is as unremarkable and nonlimiting as gender and sexuality, with brown, trans, nonbinary, queer, and cis female characters enjoying equal access to power and capacity for violence.Thoroughly immersive, thoroughly satisfying. (map) (Fantasy. 12-adult) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter One Fine as Gossamer, Hard as Iron   Sefia sat up in the shadows of the sick bay, startled out of some half-remembered dream.   The ship rocked and plunged beneath her, making the jars of ointment and bottles of tonic rattle on their shelves. Outside, rain spattered the portholes, blurring her view of the waves, high as rolling hills.   A storm. They must have come upon it in the night.   Sefia shivered, hugging her knees to her chest. In the four days since she'd returned to the Current with Archer, she'd had the same dream again and again. She was back in the house on the hill, and ink was seeping--no, flooding --from the secret room in the basement where her parents had kept the Book, the dark waves reaching across the floor to grasp them by the ankles and crawl up their calves. In the dream, Lon and Mareah scooped her up. In the dream, they shoved her out the door. But they were always too slow to save themselves, always too slow to escape the growing pool of ink that drew them, screaming, into its black depths.   Destiny. Her parents had been destined to die young, their futures recorded in the Book with everything that had ever been or would ever be, from the flicker of a mayfly's wings to the life spans of the stars overhead.   Somewhere in the Book was the passage where her mother got sick.   Somewhere were the paragraphs that described her father being tortured.   It had been written, so it had come to pass.   But they'd fought it. They'd betrayed the Guard, the secret society of readers to which they'd sworn their undying allegiance. They'd stolen the Book, the Guard's most powerful weapon, to protect their daughter from her own future. They'd run.   They'd lost, in the end, but oh, how they'd fought .   As Sefia had to fight now. Fight and win , or she'd lose Archer to destiny too.   Beside her, he lay curled beneath the blankets, hair tousled, fingers twitching in his sleep. He always slept so little, his dreams haunted by memories of the people he'd killed.   He felt fractured , he'd told her. At all times, he was the same small-town boy he'd been before the Guard's impressors took him, and yet, at all times, he was an animal, he was a victim, he was a killer, he was loud as thunder, he was the boy from the legends, with a bloodlust that could not be slaked.   Lightning forked in the distance, pulsing like veins in the restless sky.   As if in response, Archer's body spasmed. He let out a wordless gasp.   Sefia shifted out of his way. "Archer. It's okay. You're safe."   His eyes opened. For a moment, he seemed to have trouble emerging from his dreams, seemed to have trouble recognizing where he was, who he was.   But the moment would pass. It always did. And then--   The smile. It spread across his face like dawn racing over water--his lips, his cheeks, his golden eyes. Every time, it was like he was seeing her for the first time, his expression full of such hope that she longed to see it again and again for the rest of her days.   For a second, the storm abated. For a second, the ship was still. For a second, Sefia's whole world was light and soft and warm.   "Sefia," he whispered, tucking her hair behind her ear.   She bent closer, drawn to him as a hummingbird is drawn to a flower, her mouth gently landing on his. He leaned into her kiss, responding to her lips and wandering hands as if her very touch was magic, making him moan and arch and yearn for more.   He laced his fingers in her hair, like he needed to be closer to her, like he couldn't get enough of her, but as he tried to sit up, he let out a sudden hiss of pain and reached for his injured side.   "I'm sorry," she said.   "Don't be." Propping himself up on his elbows, he grinned. "I'm not."   Her cheeks warmed as she pulled aside the blanket to examine his bandages. Doc had stitched and dressed the wound twice now: first when he'd arrived, half-conscious, with the gash below his ribs black and nauseatingly deep, and a second time when Archer had torn his sutures trying to help Cooky dump a pot of potato peels overboard. Sefia would never hear the end of it if Doc had to redo the stitches again.     "I'm fine." Archer tried batting her away.   "You almost died."   "Only almost." He shrugged. He'd told her about the fight with Serakeen. There had been the smell of cordite and blood. A gust of magic that had swept Archer's lieutenants, Frey and Aljan, into the wall of the alley before dropping them, unconscious, onto the cobbles. The resistance of bone as Archer severed Serakeen's hand at the wrist.   "I should've been there," Sefia said, not for the first time. If she'd been there, she could have protected him. She had the same magic as Serakeen--a magic the Guard called Illumination--she might have even matched him in a fight. After all, she thought bitterly, I'm the daughter of an assassin and the most powerful sorcerer the world has seen in years.   No. She didn't want to believe in that future. She wouldn't become a weapon in some war for control of the Five Kingdoms. She wouldn't lose Archer, the boy she loved.   "You're here now. That's what matters," Archer said quietly. "Without you, we wouldn't be able to rescue Frey and Aljan."   His bloodletters, his friends , had followed him into the fight with Serakeen, and Serakeen still had them. The Guard's Apprentice Soldier, known to Sefia's parents as Rajar, had once been Lon and Mareah's friend and collaborator. Together, they'd orchestrated the war that was supposed to claim Archer's life.   How many of her parents' mistakes would Sefia have to fix? She'd loved them, but they'd made so many.   "Frey and Aljan will be all right," Sefia said.   "You really think so?"   She trailed her fingers down his arm, over the fifteen burns that marked his kills in the impressors' fighting rings, and took his hand. "Yes," she said.   The plan was to return to the bloodletters, organize a rescue, and meet up with the Current of Faith again at Haven, an island in the unexplored reaches of the Central Sea-one of those places you could get to only if you were told how to get there. Reed had set it up months ago to take in outlaws on the run from the widening scope of the war. If Sefia and Archer got there with the bloodletters, they would all have a place to wait while the fighting-and destiny-passed them by. If they got to Haven, Archer would live.   But first, they needed the Book. Sefia couldn't teleport to the bloodletters without a clear image of where they were, and only the Book, with its infinite pages of history, could provide that.   She'd hidden it in the safest place she could think of: the Jaharan messengers' post. The messengers' guild dealt in all kinds of secrets--delicate packages, incriminating information--and they never broke their trust. They were respected and powerful, and while it was with them, no one could touch the Book.   Not even the Guard. She hoped.   The Current of Faith was on its way to Jahara now; they were only a few days away. A few days, and she'd have the Book back. A few days, and she'd be able to find the bloodletters and mount a rescue. A few days. Frey and Aljan just had to hold on a few more days.   Archer lifted Sefia's hand to his lips. "What would I do without you?"   "You'll never have to find out." She kissed him again, and the kiss was a promise. A promise of high winds and open waters, of lying, legs tangled, on a white beach with nothing but the firmament for a coverlet, of succulent days and hot breath and damp skin and years rich as wine and endless as the sea. Excerpted from The Storyteller by Traci Chee All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.