Reviewed by e_rodz_leb on
That being said, the Mapmakers trilogy is a fantasy and even though it is considered middle grade, it had an universal appeal. There is magic, religious fanaticism, prejudice, bad people (and I mean BAD people), pirates, adventure, exploration and much more. It is really hard to put into words how much is housed between the pages of the book. The plot is intricate, complicated, full of twists and turns and action packed. I mean, Grove is a genius to create so many settings, languages and cultures. The writing is beautiful.
Sophia, Theo and Shadrack are our main characters. Shadrack is one of the most famous cartologists of New Boston, a professor and prominent citizen very active in the government. Sophia is Shadrack's nice. She's in search of her parents that left to help a friend in Spain when she was very little and never came back. She's also a student of maps and her internal clock is broken (that means she looses track of time very easily). Theo is an orphan that we get to met on the first book of the trilogy and is sort of adopted by Shadrack. The characterization is incredibly good and there are SO many characters both new and old. The character growth that both Sophia and Theo undertake throughout the course of the series is amazing.
I really don't want to get into the details because so much happens here and a lot of it is spoilery if you haven't read the first two books.
The only thing I didn't like is that even at the end, Grove didn't explain how the Disruption came to be. I thought that we would get some sort of explanation of what happened.
Overall, The Crimson Skew is an imaginative series of a that creates an intricate world building based on a catastrophic event. It s a series about family and friendship, about adventure, about following your heart, about doing the right things even when it's not the easiest thing to do. It's about being open to the possibilities and about maps.
The Crimson Skew (indeed, the whole series) was narrated by Cassandra Campbell. She is a veteran at voice acting and it shows. The voices are amazing, very distinctive from each other and cohesive thought the series which is a big accomplishment since there SO many characters and accents. An outstanding job.
This review was originally posted on Quite the Novel Idea
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 3 August, 2016: Finished reading
- 3 August, 2016: Reviewed