Review posted February 1, 2025.
Feiwel and Friends, 2022. 405 pages.
Review written October 28, 2022, from a library book.
Starred Review
Here's another wonderful fantasy with a transgender character front and center. As with the outstanding book Cemetery Boys, there is again a gendered element to the magic. In Teo's case, he's the son of Quetzal, the goddess of birds, and has wings. Those wings are brown and dull-colored like a female bird, even though he's been taking testosterone for about a year. So instead of binding his breasts, which he no longer needs to do after top surgery, he binds his wings to hide them.
But that isn't central to the plot (and we know from the beautiful cover picture that's going to work out). What the book is mainly about are the Sunbearer Trials.
As a prologue, we get the story of how the gods made humans and the land of Reina del Sol. There's also a hierarchy of gods, which is explained, with the Gold gods next after Sol and the Jade gods after that. Then there are the Obsidian gods who are selfish and destructive and whom Sol bound in the heavens by sacrificing their life.
Every ten years, there must be a new sacrifice to renew that protection. And to choose the sacrifice, ten children of gods compete in the Sunbearer Trials. The winner becomes the Sunbearer, who goes to the cities of Reina del Sol with the renewed Sol Stone. The loser becomes the new sacrifice.
So it's a little like the Hunger Games, except only one competitor dies.
With that mythical background, I was surprised to find the story is about a modern civilization with television and internet and posts going viral. But gods, dioses, live among humans. Teo is a semidios, one of the children of a god.
The Gold semidioses go to a special Academy to train to be heroes. With the abilities they inherit from their parents, it's expected that they will spend their lives protecting humans, and they train for the Sunbearer Trials along the way. Teo's mother Quetzal is a Jade goddess, so Jade has to go to public school with mortals. The only ability he inherited, besides his wings, is the ability to talk with birds.
Normally, all the competitors in the Sunbearer Trials are Gold semidioses. But this year, Teo is chosen, and so is thirteen-year-old Xio, the son of the god of Bad Luck. It doesn't seem at all fair, since neither Teo nor Xio has been trained for the trials, so Teo is determined to help Xio not be the sacrifice, as well as trying to avoid it himself.
Warning: This book ends with the words To Be Continued. But the book itself tells about the Sunbearer Trials, which take place in five different cities of Reino Del Sol. So you learn much about that world along the way.
Teo isn't the only queer character in the book, and nonbinary characters and people with two dads (for example) are considered completely normal, which is all lovely and refreshing. And one of the semidioses competing was Teo's best friend when they were much younger, but ever since he started at the Academy, he treats Teo as if all that meant nothing.
This book reminded me very much of Rick Riordan books, since, after all, it involves half-gods. There's also witty banter and smart aleck remarks between the characters. Which all is not necessarily my favorite kind of fantasy, but kids do like it, and I did love the inclusion of multiple genders as a matter of course. There were some details about the world that made me wonder, but it was so much fun hearing about the different gods' cities, I didn't let that bother me as much as I might have if I weren't as invested in the story.
And yes, I will want to find out what happens next.