Book Review: The Everlasting by Alix E. Harrow

The author Francis Spufford, whose work I haven't yet read, recommended this on a podcast I rarely listen to. A jump into the unknown that really paid handsomely. Highly recommended.

#AlixEHarrow #TheEverlasting

author @[email protected] in the hope that one day Alix bridges their account to mastodon.

A book review of “The Everlasting” by Alix E Harrow

Originally published in 2025

Genre: Fantasy

Page Count: 311 pages

Within the country of Dominion, there is one legend that is the cornerstone of their national identity. That is the tale of Una Everlasting, a girl who seemingly came out of nowhere many centuries ago beneath a yew tree and was raised a family of woodcutters. One day, she had to leave the village for a bit and when she returned, she discovered that it had been raided and only she survived. She then drew the blade from the yew tree beneath where she had been found and began to travel until she met the one who would become queen. It was there that she was named Una and later would receive her second name. She was knighted and became a national symbol; however, this story does not end without the tragedy of her death.

In the present, Owen Mallory falls in love with this story. He’s a scholar who also became a soldier for a while. It is her story that pushes him forward. It even pushes him into the past after having been sent a mysterious, previously unknown version of her story. He meets her and gets to know her better than a centuries-old story would tell him. He even falls in love with her; however, it still cannot end well. Her story always ends the same way, with tragedy. If they want to rewrite her story, they will need to do more than rewrite it in the present. This is easier said than done.

While reading this novel, I could easily see the inspiration of the Arthurian cycle. The story of Sir Una Everlasting is central to this novel, and it goes way further than how the story impacts Owen personally. This novel delves into how it affects the national identity and propaganda of Dominion.

At its heart, this is a novel about two people from very different periods of time bound by this story. The book is written with both Owen and Una telling each other the story. Because of this, in the narration, there are a lot more second-person pronouns than I’m used to. This did take a few chapters to get used to, but in the end, it made the story feel a lot more personal to me. It also gave me hope that everything would turn out fine.

This was a very nice book to read. It was romantic at times and tense at others, and it was a pleasure to get to know Owen and Una. The side characters and the antagonist were also interesting. I’m glad I read it.

Personal Rating: 5/5

#2026 #AlixEHarrow #bookReview #Books #Reading #TheEverlasting
The Everlasting by Alix E. Harrow     

A critical discomfort with fantasy still remains a feature of public life.

Strange Horizons
On Saturday I finished "The Everlasting" by Alix E Harrow. I was crying for the last 50 or so pages of the book and for at least half an hour later. It was so well written, so emotional, so beautifully put together. I loved this book so much. One of my top books of 2025.
#books #reading #alixeharrow #theeverlasting

October Reading Radar For Analogue Worlds In Portland, Oregon

The weather is cooling, and I am turning to my bookshelves to keep me warm. There are a few upcoming releases I am excited for, but the majority of my anticipated book releases are being paired with a book tour that stops through Portland, so you can find those recommendations towards the end of this article. For Portland, it is a busy month of book events for Analogue Worlds. When I use the term "Analogue Worlds," this is short-hand for naming the genres of books that are worlds separate […]

https://investigativegeek.com/2025/10/14/october-reading-radar-for-analogue-worlds-in-portland-oregon/

Greenteeth

May 20, 2025

GREENTEETH rating: four stars ⭐⭐⭐⭐.

What a debut! After yesterday–because I read the cozy fantasy GREENTEETH (Orbit/Hachette, February 25, 2025) in a single day–I’m a new fan of author Molly O’Neill. She knows her myths.

A goblin, a river spirit, and a witch walk into a bar. . .no, actually, they walk into the court of the Fairy King and Queen by way of enchanted fairy roads, and are given three quests in order to craft a magic weapon to defeat the bad guy. Can you resist this premise? You aren’t my people if you can.

A preacher shows up in a medieval English backwater called Chipping Appleby and turns out to be possessed by a wicked and ancient being, the Erl King. He doesn’t condemn Temperance Crump to death by drowning out of mere prejudice against healing women: Temperance doesn’t realize what a powerful sorceress she is, and therefore a threat to “Pastor Braddock’s” nefarious plans. Temperance is saved from death by Jenny Greenteeth, also a very ancient being, who lives in the river. As folklorist and podcaster Icy Sedgwick explains in her “Strange River Folklore: River Gods and Dark Spirits”: “[T]he grindylow appears in British folklore as a cautionary tale. Sometimes known as Jenny Greenteeth, the grindylow lurks in English rivers, ponds and marshes. According to the legends, these nasty critters dragged children into the deepest parts of the rivers if they ventured into the shallows.” (icysedgwick.com, “Folklore,” March 13, 2021). Despite her reputation, Jenny is good-hearted and keeps her river quite neat and tidy.

I was delighted with Jenny’s narrative voice from the very first sentence. This is how you do a first-person narrator.

Jenny pulls Temperance into her river cave full of treasures and they become friends. . .mostly. It’s a troubled friendship, full of misunderstandings. Temperance wants to go back to her family (without being executed for witchcraft again) and needs the help of Jenny’s deep power drawn from the river. They are driven to seeking the assistance of the Fairy King when they fail miserably to defeat the evil Erl King who has possessed Braddock’s body.

For three quests you need at least three questers, and the witty goblin Brackus, who sells treasures from the goblin market from his bottomless sack, makes up a third. It’s his idea to seek out the Fairy King who used to lead the Wild Hunt before he went into retirement. As a traveling salesman, Brackus knows the roads, including the fairy roads, and realizes that they will need to tap into far greater power to have any chance against such a foe.

For a bonus quester we have a dog! Lady Creiddylad, the Fairy Queen, equips the group with magic and advice, like Galadriel in Tolkien’s THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING (July, 1954), only Galadriel didn’t have a tall, rangy Wild Hunt hound named Cavall to send with the Fellowship. Cavall is itching for a good run.

Fairy court, goblin market goods, epic hound dog, found family, Welsh-ish names, epic journeys: GREENTEETH has everything a fantasy fan needs for a few hours of summer pleasure reading.

The twist/big reveal at the end? Magnificent. I felt dumb for not having predicted it given all the clues, but I’m glad I didn’t. Unless I come across some more super-fun reads, GREENTEETH will very likely make my list of top 10 books of 2025.

Reading in context:

Gender-bending ladyknights seem to be a theme in 2025 fantasy novels, and you can add Temperance and Jenny to the list. You won’t want to miss the third installment in the “Legends and Lattes” series by Travis Baldree, BRIGANDS AND BREADKNIVES (Tor/Macmillan, November 11, 2025), in which rattkin bookseller Fern sort-of-accidentally becomes the squire of Astryx, warrior of legend and ballad, or THE EVERLASTING by Alix E. Harrow (Tor/Macmillan, (October 28, 2025), a time-loop extravaganza starring ladyknight Una Everlasting. The romance in THE EVERLASTING had me in tears, and the depth of Harrow’s character development of the villain was astonishing.

What I’m reading now:

THE STRENGTH OF THE FEW by James Islington (Saga/Simon & Schuster, November 11, 2025), the second novel in the “Hierarchy” series.

#Greenteeth #MollyONeill #fantasy #sff #England #IcySedgwick #fae #cozy #WildHunt #LOTR #Tolkien #LegendsAndLattes #BrigandsAndBreadknives #TheEverlasting #AlixEHarrow #magic

#AlixEHarrow #BrigandsAndBreadknives #cozy #England #fae #fantasy #Greenteeth #IcySedgwick #Legends #LegendsAndLattes #LOTR #magic #MollyONeill #sff #TheEverlasting #Tolkien #WildHunt

#TTRPG Saw this, so I'll steal it too even though I've already done similar stuff:

Currently Running: #TheBlood, #ExVsWoD (soon)

Currently Playing: #ChangelingTheDreaming, #ExaltedDemake,

Most Played: #ChroniclesOfDarkness

Most Run: Ditto

Want to Try: #WrathAndGlory, #WorldsWithoutNumber, both the games I'm running on the player end...

Want to Return To: #TheEverlasting, #Pathfinder2e

Why hello there, bandwagon, don't mind if I jump on you!

Last five #TTRPG's I've played:
#Pathfinder2e
#TheEverlasting
#BESM4e
#Pathfinder1e
#ChroniclesOfDarkness

Last 5 I've run:
#TheBlood
#Deadlands (SWADE)
#Pathfinder1e
#ChroniclesOfDarkness
#EldritchCareUnit

Next 5 I want to play:
#WorldsWithoutNumber
#WrathAndGlory
#TheBlood
#ExVsWoD
#WFRP
Probably plenty of others, those just came to mind first. Always more I wanna try...