Review: The Unbearable Heaviness of Remembering, by L. Jagi Lamplighter
Here we go again.
If you haven't seen the other books of Rachel Griffin ... this is a very long story. And I have other reviews that you're going to want to look at.
Book 1: The Unexpected Enlightenment of Rachel Griffin
Book 2: The Raven, the Elf, and Rachel
Book 3: Rachel and the Many-Splendored Dream Land
Book 4: Awful Truth about Forgetting
By this point, we should all realize that I'm still reading them at book five, so it's a good assumption that this book, too, was awesome, and you should read it.
For those of you who are not up to speed on this series: we have a magical girl from a magical family at a magical boarding school with her magical friends. Her best friends include how a Dickens character should look after going through the foster care system (less like Oliver Twist, more like the Artful Dodger), a magical Australian with a magical stick up her ass, and Victor von Doom -- I mean Vladimir von Dread.
Imagine if JK Rowling had done a deep dive and actually built a world from the ground up, and every character had a full range of emotions and conflicting thoughts and agendas, while there are actual stakes that amounted to more than just the existence of the school, but existence itself.
That's the Rachel Griffin novels.
Also, it's so nice to find a fantasy novel that includes other magic traditions and mythology outside of the UK and continental Europe. If there's a myth or lore or type of fantasy magic that Jagi hasn't thrown in yet, I haven't heard of them.
I'm going to avoid posting the description of the book here for one simple reason: It spoils events in the second half of the book, something I've found jarring since as long as I can recall.
The story
When Book 5 opens, Rachel's school, Roanoke Academy, has a problem: the local wild fey are loose. The wizards were supposed to keep the local wild fey psychopath under lock and key. But now it's escaped, and the local fey no longer need to adhere to their bargain. If the Heer is not imprisoned again, and the fey put back in their place, Roanoke Academy will close.
One must admire Jagi's restraint with book five. It opens a whole two days after the end of book 4 -- usually the next book will open the same day as the last book ended, giving Terry Goodkind a run for his money on "the morning after" opening of The Sword of Truth. And there is so much blowback here, yikes.
The pace is only slightly more relaxed than usual. The opening threat wasn't lethal, which is about as relaxed as the book gets. The rest of the novel has an undercurrent of multiple threats, spread out along the length of the book. The pacing hurries along at a quick gallop, slowing here and there for world and character building. And then get out of a way before you get run over. As I've said in previous reviews, if Rachel's days go any faster, she'll have to change her name to Jack Bauer. Hunting fey on the Roanoke Academy grounds makes for a wonderful subplot. It ties in nicely to the second subplot later on.
No, I'm not sure if there is a main plot anywhere here. There are basically two major subplots jammed together, but they fit so well you don't care that the only main thread is the series plot, not a main plot for the novel.
We have Ankh-Morpork style football, a magical government that makes sense, sports team names that don't (show of hands: who wants your sports team to be named The Maenads?), Jim Butcher Scooby-Doo jokes, and students armed with a Bowie knife... which is an odd complaint given that they're all armed with wands, but seriously, who let that guy have a Bowie knife? Heck, Jagi even spells out the difference between the Seelie and the Unseelie... which I don't even think Harry Dresden explained.
It's so nice to see that in a world of magic, hydrogen peroxide is still used to remove blood from clothing.
Oh yes, and Death? Death shows up. And of course, HE SPEAKS IN ALL CAPS. BECAUSE OF COURSE HE DOES, TERRY PRATCHETT HAS PROVEN IT TO BE SO.
The characters
What can one say about the book that I haven't already in prior reviews? Her brother is Lord Peter, her family estate is in Dartmoor -- they have a local beast that is not specifically referred to as a dog, a hound, or even a Great Dane. Rachel's family use microexpressions both to read people and to mislead them.
There are problems, of course. Mostly with some of the characters being ... themselves. At least one magical princess needs to be smothered with a magical pillow; then they issue her a bodyguard with Omega beams. Rachel's best friend (of her own age) might be one kid who needs mild sedatives for everyone else's safety ... or he need to learn restraint, perhaps with a butterfly net.
I think the problems of the book can all be summed up as, well, high school is one big problem.
Rachel also has flaws ... largely in that she has to stop reading classic romance novels; when she starts thinking romance, the narrative voice goes into prose so purple, I swear the text color changes. And she is such a kid. Despite saving the world enough times that even the adults listen to her when she says there is a problem, Rachel has very definite ideas of what should happen. She has this idea that she should have a womanly figure ... at 14. (pardon me while I head desk).
And then her PTSD kicks in, because really, after the skeleton baby incident, we should be worried if she didn't have PTSD.
Also, seriously, in a world where magic is a day to day thing, you'd think someone would have taught them to be really REALLY careful, and very specific, about the wishes one makes.
But you can say one thing about their characters flaws -- these people characters have characters to actually develop, which is more than I can say for certain other books. Heck, there are some characters in this series who I didn't know they had characters to develop.
The world
I have often noted in my review of Chuck Dixon's time travel action books that he will not only go into world building, but will build three worlds at once: the present, the past, and either another part of the past, or part of the future.
Jagi is dealing with a multiverse, so she not only builds the world we're reading, but worlds that other people have been evacuated from. Forget 6-dimensional chess, she's literally doing multi-dimensional worldbuilding.
Line up every mythology known to man on a dartboard. Throw a dart to a random section. Odds are, that dart will hit on a mythology that Jagi has built into these novels.
The politics
This book is not politically on the right. Philosophically, definitely, but politically ... the local politics are very local. But consider that everyone is armed with a deadly weapon, God is an active physical presence (and makes for an adorable mini-lion) and while there are some shades of gray, there are whole swaths of black and white.
Content warning
The Lord of the Rings films are rated for "fantasy violence." That sounds about right.
Who is it for?
This is for anyone who wanted more Harry Potter ... or more from Harry Potter.
Why read it?
[easyazon_link identifier="B086GKM896" locale="US" tag="upstreamreviews-20"]Because it's just plain fun. Buy it here[/easyazon_link]