The Twyning by Terence Blacker

The Twyning

by Terence Blacker

What WATERSHIP DOWN did for rabbits, THE TWYNING will do for the kingdom of rats.

A story of love, war and rats...

This is the story of Efren, a young ratling born into the Court of Tasting, in the kingdom of rats below the city streets. The kingdom is in turmoil after the death of the old king, assassinated by a human scientist, Dr Henry Ross-Gibbon. Obsessed by an ambition to exterminate all rats, the doctor is assisted by Dogboy, an abandoned thirteen-year-old with a gift for understanding animals. Soon a war to the death rages between the rat kingdom and its mortal enemy: humankind.

Hurt and alone, Efren finds shelter with Dogboy and his friend Caz, a runaway eleven-year-old girl. And between these unlikely allies a spark is ignited – first of communication, then of hope. This tumultuous story of creatures caught up in a pitiless war transcends the barriers between animals and humans. What Watership Down did for rabbits, THE TWYNING will do for the kingdom of rats.

Reviewed by Lianne on

2 of 5 stars

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I received an ARC of this novel courtesy of ArmchairBEA 2014 and the publishers. This review in its entirety was originally posted at caffeinatedlife.net: http://www.caffeinatedlife.net/blog/2014/08/07/review-the-twyning/

The author created a very peculiar world with The Twyning, a twist on your good ol’ exterminator vs the rat population. The world he created in this novel reminded me of Brian Jacques’ Redwall series and Neil Gaiman’s Neverwhere with the overall gloomy atmosphere, the mysterious atmosphere and the underground world. The rat kingdom has its own society and practices that was quite complex, especially as various factions begin to vye for power.

While the characters–both rat and human–come from different backgrounds and life experiences, they weren’t really interesting or garnered my attention enough to care about the events that unfolded for then. Caz was the only character who had an interesting back story that had me really intrigued, but otherwise I honestly wasn’t compelled to know what happened next, except to know whether everyone made it through their respective ordeals.

The Twyning was weirdly interesting enough with a curious world-building involved but otherwise it wasn’t really for me. I’m also not sure if the target audience will enjoy this novel; I thought the language used was a little too stiff, more for adult fantasy, than for children’s/young adult fantasy. But each to their own. I may not have enjoyed it but I’m sure there’s some young readers out there who would relish this story.

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  • Started reading
  • 17 July, 2014: Finished reading
  • 17 July, 2014: Reviewed