Book Review: The Forest of Forgotten Vows

Book Review: The Forest of Forgotten Vows

The Forest of Forgotten Vows

by

Grace Carlisle

I should confess Iโ€™m rather prejudiced against books about the fae. So often, it seems like itโ€™s all just glitzy sparkly magic romantic fluff, but Iโ€™m starting to think that may not be entirely fair.

Itโ€™s not like Iโ€™ve never been wrong about these things in the past. I felt much the same way about fantasy romance until I read Reign & Ruin.

Even so, I probably wouldnโ€™t have picked this one up if it werenโ€™t for the cover, and Iโ€™m glad I didnโ€™t read the description. The Forest of Forgotten Vows is immersive, creepy, and deals with some pretty heavy issues.

Tamsin has barely any memories of her childhood. Erased by trauma, therapy, and medication. Consequences of her mind never growing out of the phase of having imaginary friends. Not until she was sent to a boarding school did her delusions go away, and she began to adapt to life in the real world.

When her grandmother falls ill, Tamsin is the only one to look after her, and as she returns to her childhood home, so do her imaginary friends.

What Iโ€™ll whine about

This story is written in first person present tense, which can be enough for me to abandon a book after a few paragraphs. Iโ€™m learning that itโ€™s a matter of execution though, and not the tense/PoV in itself. Fortunately, in this case, the executions is nearly flawless.

Iโ€™d have preferred past tense, but you canโ€™t have everything, and the book reads easy enough as it is.

What Iโ€™ll gush about

Gas-lighting. Now, this isnโ€™t a fun or pleasant thing at all, but it feels like itโ€™s really well done in this story. Her entire life, everyone around her has convinced Tamsin sheโ€™s crazy, and because of it, sheโ€™s having a really hard time accepting what her senses tell her. Itโ€™s difficult, sometimes frustrating, but also believable. Sheโ€™s in an awful situation, and thereโ€™s so much uncertainty in the story, itโ€™s hard to predict where itโ€™s going.

It wasnโ€™t until the last ten percent I finally figured it out.

The ending. As mentioned above, it wasnโ€™t until very late in the story that I saw what was coming. Perhaps itโ€™s because Iโ€™m not used to the tropes of fae stories, or perhaps it really is a clever and unusual twist. I donโ€™t know, and I donโ€™t really care. I liked it, and it felt right, and thatโ€™s what matters. On top of that, the ending manages to be both a satisfying conclusion to the story leave me wondering whatโ€™s next.

Final Words

This is a story involving the fae, but itโ€™s really about being human.

Find The Forest of Forgotten Vows on Goodreads.

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