Tag: Sylvie Cathrall

Review – A Letter from the Lonesome Shore

Posted May 18, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – A Letter from the Lonesome Shore

A Letter from the Lonesome Shore

by Sylvie Cathrall

Genres: Fantasy
Pages: 384
Series: The Sunken Archive #2
Rating: five-stars
Synopsis:

The charming conclusion to the Sunken Archive duology, a heart-warming magical academia fantasy filled with underwater cities, romance of manners and found family, perfect for fans of Emily Wilde's Encyclopaedia of Faeries.

Former correspondents E. and Henerey, accustomed to loving each other from afar, did not anticipate continuing their courtship in an enigmatic underwater city. When their journey through the Structure in E.'s garden strands them in a peculiar society preoccupied with the pleasures and perils of knowledge, E. and Henerey come to accept--and, more surprisingly still, embrace--the fact that they may never return home.

A year and a half later, Sophy and Vyerin finally discover one of the elusive Entries that will help them seek their siblings. As the group's efforts bring them closer to E. and Henerey, an ancient, cosmic threat also draws near...

I received a copy of this book for free in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

I was a huge fan of Sylvie Cathrall’s debut, so I was very excited to read the follow-up, A Letter from the Lonesome Shore. For the majority of the book, it builds up the little mysteries more and more, and keeps up the same format of letters and documents relating to E. Cidnosin and Henery Clel (both letters between them, and letters relating to their siblings’ search for them).

For the first little bit of the book, I wasn’t quite sure. I didn’t know who the characters were and what their involvement in E. and Henery’s story was, so it seemed like the book might be taking a step back from them, which I didn’t love. But soon enough the letters between E. and Henery began, and their love winds gently through the story — along with the love their siblings have for them, and the determination of Vyerin and Sophy to find them.

I would say that the ending didn’t quite work for me just in that there were so many mysteries built up and not discussed that it broke the tension a little to have anything revealed. You know that principle where the monster in a horror movie is scariest when the director doesn’t show it directly? Like that. I did like the solution of the mysteries, and how the whole book ended: it’s entirely fitting! But the building up of the mysteries did add a lot, and it was weird once things were revealed and out in the open. It was satisfyingly weird, but not “weird beyond my wildest dreams of weird”, which is what all the obfuscation was beginning to make me feel like it ought to be.

Still, I feel like that’s rather a quibble against all else I love about this book. I adore E., I love that her (literal) OCD is presented, and not treated as a superpower nor as something that will prevent her ever achieving any of her aims, but just as a significant and disabling part of her life. Likewise Henery’s anxieties. Having at least three asexual characters with varying degrees of interest in romance is also a lovely thing.

Overall, it’s a lovely, lovely duology — I assume it’s over, given where it’s left, but who knows…

Rating: 5/5

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Review – A Letter to the Luminous Deep

Posted June 4, 2024 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – A Letter to the Luminous Deep

A Letter to the Luminous Deep

by Sylvie Cathrall

Genres: Fantasy, Romance
Pages: 368
Series: Luminous Deep #1
Rating: five-stars
Synopsis:

A beautiful discovery outside the window of her underwater home prompts the reclusive E. to begin a correspondence with renowned scholar Henerey Clel. The letters they share are filled with passion, at first for their mutual interests, and then, inevitably, for each other.

Together, they uncover a mystery from the unknown depths, destined to transform the underwater world they both equally fear and love. But by no mere coincidence, a seaquake destroys E.’s home, and she and Henerey vanish.

A year later, E.’s sister Sophy, and Henerey’s brother Vyerin, are left to solve the mystery of their siblings’ disappearances with the letters, sketches and field notes left behind. As they uncover the wondrous love their siblings shared, Sophy and Vyerin learn the key to their disappearance – and what it could mean for life as they know it.

I received a copy of this book for free in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

I really loved A Letter to the Luminous Deep, which I believe is Sylvie Cathrall’s debut. When I came up for air after finishing it, I was really startled by the number of DNFs, ambivalent reviews, and people who downright hated it. I can understand why, though: it’s written in an entirely epistolary format, which mostly works, and the letters are written with a sort of Regency-level formality and style. That means the execution of the plot takes some serious time, since the letters need to build characters and relationship in order to make the plot feel satisfying.

The frame story behind why these letters have been collected is equally important, in the end, to the story revealed in the letters themselves. There’s basically three threads:

1. Henery and E. form a friendship, discover something mysterious, and investigate it, ultimately leading to their disappearance;
2. E.’s sister Sophy is part of an expedition deep underwater to study wildlife, which encounters something strange as well;
3. Sophy and Vyerin (Henery’s brother) try to piece together their siblings’ archive of letters to understand how their connection formed and what happened to them.

The third thread is fraught with grief and fondness, as Sophy and Vyerin try to figure out what their lives look like without their siblings, try to give comfort to one another, and work through the loss to remember who their siblings were and share something of that. The first and second threads take time to reveal their secrets, and we discover what happened at the same pace as Sophy and Vyerin come to understand it themselves.

It’s a story that rewards some patience, and which may depend on how well the letters hit for you. I had no trouble telling who was writing what letter, though I know other readers did, and I loved E. and her bravery in vulnerability, discussing what is clearly obsessive-compulsive disorder, and possibly also social anxiety or maybe generalised anxiety disorder. I thought that portrayal was well done, as someone who has OCD/GAD, and I wasn’t surprised to learn that Cathrall has OCD. (I didn’t find it triggering, for what it’s worth, though the things that get to me are a little different from E.’s triggers.)

I’ve seen people describe this one as cosy, and I think it both is and isn’t. There’s a deep sadness here in knowing from the start that E. and Henery are gone, and in following Vyerin and Sophy’s path to understand why they died.

There are a few points that felt overly awkward to me in the epistolary format, and the one that jumped out was Henery and E.’s first meeting, where we know what happened because they wrote notes to each other on a programme because E.’s brother is putting on some kind of performance that’s too loud for them to hear each other. It’s a reasonably neat way of getting them into the same place but preserving a text record, but what they’ve supposedly written to each other (in full sentences, with punctuation) doesn’t ring true — even lampshaded by the commentary of Sophy, who says her sister would’ve used full sentences to calm herself down.

Still, for the most part it worked well for me, and I felt enchanted. I’m eager to read the next book, and wondering how on earth it can be achieved through the medium of letters.

Rating: 5/5

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