Review by Booklist Review
Solveig, the eldest daughter of Eril the Battle-Mad, was first suspected of holding weirding magic capable of calling flame when she was only four years old. Since then, she has been trained to serve as volva of Dun Rithell, her Southern village. The role of volva is deeply sacred and, as such, Solveig is assigned a Black-Winged shield-maiden to always protect her. Solveig's duties are disrupted one day when her brother accidentally kills a member of a visiting Northern clan. Northerns keep to the old ways, and as vengeance, they demand that Solveig become their ward. Bound by duty, Solveig is forced to leave and travel north with her new wardens. However, those she travels with are not just Northern clansmen, and they have secret designs on her magic. A Flame in the North is an exciting and fresh take on Norse folklore and mythology, and Saintcrow (The Salt-Black Tree, 2023) masterfully presents a successful, page-turning mystery. Fans of Saintcrow's expansive catalog will love this new setting, and she is sure to draw new readers who love stories of epic fantasy, magic, power, destiny, and friendship.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Saintcrow (the Dante Valentine series) launches the Black Land's Bane series with an intense and intricate epic steeped in the magic of Norse mythology. Eldest daughter Solveig has powers as both an elementalist and a "full-fledged volva," or seer. After her brother kills a man from the North, the other members of the man's party, Aeredh and Eol, are entitled to recompense--a life for a life. They request Solveig as a weregild, or hostage, beholden to them for a year and a day in order to repay the wrong. Solveig and Arneior, her sworn shieldmaid who is blessed by the Wingéd Ones, head north with Aeredh and Eol. As the path becomes more dangerous, the women discover that their captors have strange powers of their own; that the much-fabled Black Land, the home of a great evil, is real; and that an army is rising within, which only Solveig's powers may be able to stop from sweeping the land. Saintcrow vividly paints the protagonist's journey, combining heart-pounding action with dense and complex worldbuilding. Epic fantasy fans will be enthralled. Agent: Lucienne Diver, Knight Agency. (Feb.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
An epic fantasy with echoes of Tolkien and Norse myth. Young Solveig is a weirdling, and a rare one born with enough elemental magic to work with all of the elements and even summon flame from nothing. On the night of the Long Dark festival, the only worry on her mind is whether she'll succeed in relighting the bonfire, since it's her first year doing it alone as a fully trained volva. But even before her long night's vigil is over, Solveig gets the grim news that her brother has killed a visitor from a great House in the north. Worse, the price the Northerners demand is a child for a child--and they want her to travel north with them as weregild for a year and a day. Accompanied only by her trusted shieldmaid, Arneoir, Solveig rides north. But they seem to travel faster than they should; one of their party has an uncanniness about him; and her companions speak as if the Great Enemy still lived and plotted in the north. Slowly, Solveig will learn the true purpose of her journey, and she and Arn will both be tested as they are drawn deeper and deeper into the Northerners' great war against evil. This is a compelling world of quasi-Vikings, near-immortal Elders, and misshapen, evil orukhar. Tolkien fans will enjoy the many echoes of his work, including the orc-like orukhar and the great spiders of Mistwood. But this is more than just a remix of familiar epic fantasy tropes--it's a fresh and compelling quest story in its own right, suffused with the bitter cold of a winter journey and the fear and wonder of stepping into a legend and doubting you can hold your own. A thoroughly satisfying tale for fantasy fans to sink their teeth into. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.