War for the Oaks, Emma Bull
Reading this was like meeting the grandmother of October Daye and Kate Daniels. Knowing it was one of the early books to really make urban fantasy a thing, per Naomi Alderman’s introduction, it’s amazing how fresh it must have felt back then — it stood up pretty well now, but I found some aspects of it predictable because I know later books in the genre. So many of the elements were in place as far back as this. I had a lot of fun, and the descriptions of Eddi’s band and the way they play, the fun they have, are really infectious. It’s surprisingly vivid, even for me (and I don’t have a visual imagination at all!).
Likewise, the plot with Faerie and even the character arc of the phouka are all fairly obvious if you’ve been hanging around in urban fantasy — but it’s still well done and Bull does a great job of making her faeries genuinely strange, genuinely different to the humans they interact with.
All in all, a lot of fun, and I recommend it, especially for those who enjoy urban fantasy, but not only for them!
I haven’t actually heard of this book and that cover is certainly retro now! I never really thought about the early urban fantasy books before…
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I’m not sure if that’s the original cover, actually! It’s a Penguin reprint, quite recent… It was definitely a fun read, anyway!