Reviewed by kalventure on
This is a difficult book to rate for me because I experienced so many different feelings towards the book while reading it. I was sucked in straight away with Mina's adventure in the Carpathian mountains, but as the plot progressed I become less and less engaged with it and the characters. It was at about 75% when my attitude shifted from apathy to anger, and is a feeling that very much has stuck with me 2 days after finishing the book. I didn't like the shift in focus to Stoker being inspired to write Dracula and I found the nineteen year jump to 1912 to completely pull me out of any engagement that I had. I was no longer invested in the story since so much time had passed, and the whole Titanic thing just irked me for some unknown reason.
I think I struggled most with the dual/multiple perspectives. I was most interested in the archaeological mystery and thus was more drawn to Mina's POV. We all know that I appreciate strong female characters, and Mina is that in spades as well as smart and compassionate. Stoker's narrative felt the most disjointed for me - as the plot progresses, his POV becomes more and more obsessed with immortality and writing something that will achieve that (which I suppose is an interesting mirror for the antagonist's obsession with immortality). The Night's Crossing starts with Mina and Stoker perspectives, but more are added in as the story progresses - some are one-offs and others stick around - which contributed to my struggles connecting with the characters and plot.
My review is definitely in the minority here, and this book is not without its strengths. I appreciated the balance of the social injustices of the period with the main characters' response to them, especially as it relates to racism. Often times in historical fiction, authors choose to depict harmful taboos, words, and characteristics that would not be appropriate in fiction today and hide behind the historical accuracy without ever challenging those beliefs. I was very happy to see that wasn't the case here.
Overall I found The Night's Crossing to be a very interesting story that was a little bogged down by a lot of ideas. I was disappointed that the purpose of the book seemed to shift from the actual story to Stoker's desire for immortality and his inspiration for and writing of Dracula; it felt abrupt to me and detracted from the "main storyline" for me. While this book ultimately wasn't for me, I think people with an interest in history, the lengths that people will go to achieve immortality, archaeological mysteries and curses, and strong female characters will enjoy this book.
Many thanks to the publisher for providing me an electronic advanced reader copy of this book in exchange for my honest review. Quotations taken from an uncorrected proof and may change upon final publication. The Night Crossing will be released on September 18, 2018.
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Reading updates
- Started reading
- 7 September, 2018: Finished reading
- 7 September, 2018: Reviewed