9 Rated Books Book Reviews

Book Review: The Glass Casket by McCormick Templeman

The Glass CasketTitle: The Glass Casket

Author: McCormick Templeman

Genre: Horror, Fantasy, Young Adult

Publisher: Delacorte Press
Publication Date: February 2014
Hardcover: 352 Pages

Death hasn’t visited Rowan Rose since it took her mother when Rowan was only a little girl. But that changes one bleak morning, when five horses and their riders thunder into her village and through the forest, disappearing into the hills. Days later, the riders’ bodies are found, and though no one can say for certain what happened in their final hours, their remains prove that whatever it was must have been brutal.

Rowan’s village was once a tranquil place, but now things have changed. Something has followed the path those riders made and has come down from the hills, through the forest, and into the village. Beast or man, it has brought death to Rowan’s door once again.

Only this time, its appetite is insatiable.

Stand alone or series: Standalone novel

How did I get this book: Bought

Format (e- or p-): Print Book

Why did I read this book: I first heard of The Glass Casket during this past Smugglivus, when author Kristen Kittscher named the book as one of the best, most impressive works publishing in 2014. Naturally (especially given how much I trust Kristen Kittscher’s opinion), I immediately honed in on this novel – and when I saw it last week in my local bookstore, I snatched it up and devoured it whole.

Review:

Nag’s End is a quiet, remote village in the mountains, far away from the cities of the south and the sea. Things in Nag’s End are different than elsewhere in the kingdom – the mountain people cling to their traditions and superstitions, they keep to their way of life at the edge of the woods, apart from the rest of the world. Here, the dead must be buried and offered to the Goddess within 24 hours of passing on; here, there be witches, and fairies, and goblins in the shadows.

Of course, Rowan Rose doesn’t believe any of it.

The daughter of a scholar, Rowan has been taught by her father since she was a child to rely on science and reason over superstition and tradition. Like her single parent, Rowan has learned how to read and write in many languages, has honed her mind to translate and discover the truths in old texts, and she dreams of leaving the village behind to study in the grand palace city.

But then, one day, death comes to Nag’s End – with its stinking breath, dripping blood, and oozing insatiable hunger.

As the villagers die tragic, horrific deaths, Rowan grapples with the truth of reason and the impossibility of the supernatural she’s always shunned. In order to defeat this great evil, Rowan will need both her wits and belief in the unknown – the lives of all she loves depend on it.

Wow. Wow. I’m not sure what I expected when I started The Glass Casket, except that I had some vague notion that it was a horrific fairy tale retelling of Snow White and Rose Red. I was not expecting this achingly beautiful, brutally terrifying fable about secrets, about faith misplaced and found, and about the bonds of love between family, friends, and lovers. I wasn’t expecting to lose a little piece of my heart to the brilliant Rowan Rose, to the passionate Fiona Eira, to steadfast Tom, and the quietly observant Jude. I wasn’t expecting that The Glass Casket would be the best book I’ve read so far in 2014.

Suffice it to say: I love this book.

I loved the book from first sight – that delicious cover (which is very fitting in context of the book); the eerie description of the novel that sets the mood but thankfully gives nothing away. When I started The Glass Casket, I wasn’t sure what the book was about, other than an evil – possibly supernatural, possibly mundane – terrorizing a small medieval-ish town in the mountains. Really, that’s all you need to know going into the book – the not-knowing is actually a huge part of this book, and I will endeavor not to reveal too much about the plot and its particulars because the gradual horror of discovery is part of the magic of The Glass Casket.

What I will say is that this novel is a beautiful, tragic fairy tale with viciously sharp teeth. This is not a happy tale of young beautiful girls finding their truest loves and living happily ever after. There are beautiful girls, there are true loves, but there is also much blood and death, too. No. The Glass Casket is actually, at its gory, eviscerated heart, a story about power, both subtle and overt. There’s the power of the bonds of love between family: between a daughter and her beloved father, the ties to a mother she’s never known but somehow remembers and feels deeply, between siblings different as night and day. There’s the power of love at first sight and of love realized over time, and how that love sustains even the darkest of forces. On a more specific level, the novel also subtly examines the power dynamics of “ownership” and patriarchy – Rowan’s and Fiona’s feelings of helplessness in particular are heartbreakingly rendered in this book. Rowan loses her implicit trust and blind faith in her father, and is trapped under the weight of expectation; her helplessness in the face of her father’s expectations, her shifting relationship with her best friend Tom, and the other men that insinuate themselves in her life is, frankly, terrifying. Likewise Fiona, Rowan’s mother, the young Merrilee, the greenwitches and the bluewitches, and all of the women in this book feel the biting, unrelenting edge of this disenfranchisement – and with all the violence of suppressed rage and hunger, there is a reckoning.

Damn, I love this book.

The writing is polished and atmospheric, in the vein of Margo Lanagan’s Tender Morsels or Erin Bow’s Sorrow’s Knot. The characters are beautifully drawn in all their flaws and strengths, with the determined self-aware Rowan leading the group. (I’m reminded of Sophia McDougall’s essay on “I Hate Strong Women” and how Rowan is a fitting, wondrous heroine antidote to “strong.” She’s a brilliant scholar, a polyglot, who cries when she needs to cry, who asks for help, who believes in her friends and herself. She is not merely strong; she is a complete, vivid person, and I love her very much.) The relationships are poignant, the power dynamics examined in exquisite detail.

The Glass Casket is not an easy story, nor is it one that leaves you feeling giddy and put in the mind of happily ever afters with rosebuds and rainbows.

But it is a thought-provoking novel; a dark horror-fantasy with bite. I loved every precious morsel, and wholeheartedly recommend that you likewise partake in The Glass Casket.

Absolutely recommended, and already on the shortlist for my favorite books of 2014.

Notable Quotes/Parts:

It was a coffin. A glass coffin, intricately carved, and set out in the yard for all to see. Inside it was the girl, her black hair splayed out around her, her lips like rotting cherries set against a newly ashen complexion.

Her body had been swaddled in white mourning cloth, but it was possible to see that she was no longer a full person. Flowers of blood bloomed where her chest should have been, and there was a dip to the torso that intimated she’d been all but hollowed.

Arlene’s hand flew to her mouth.

And then the world seemed to spin, and a deafening cry rose up in Arlene’s ears, surrounding her, threatening to swallow her up, and she lost her ballance, her feet faltering in the snow. It was only when she caught herself that she realized that the scream had been her own.

Fighting back tears, she turned and hurried out of the yard.

Rating: 9 – Damn Near Perfection

Reading Next: Red Rising by Pierce Brown

Buy the Book:

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Ebook available for kindle US, kindle UK, nook, Google Play, Kobo & iBooks

9 Comments

  • Victoria Van Vlear
    February 17, 2014 at 2:24 pm

    Wow; this book sounds intriguing! I’m a little worried about the horror aspect, though. I’ve never been a fan of horror movies, though dark themes don’t frighten me off. Would you still recommend the book, or is it a little too dark for people not fond of horror?

  • Camilla
    February 17, 2014 at 6:05 pm

    Wow, this sounds amazing! I love horror, the supernatural and am always looking for good stand-alone books! Would you classify it as YA or more adult (despite the young protagonist)?

    Either way, although I’d never even heard of “The Glass Casket” until now, your review is definitely going to put it at the top of my TBR-mountain 😉

  • Meghan
    February 17, 2014 at 6:32 pm

    This book sounds amazing! Definitely going to read it asap! Hope my library gets it soon 🙂

  • Kristen Kittscher
    February 17, 2014 at 6:38 pm

    I’m so glad you loved it as much — and for so many of the same reasons! It continues to haunt me, months after reading it–in a good way. Thrilled you featured it. It deserves some noise!

  • Jana
    February 18, 2014 at 1:14 am

    So…what you’re saying is that I need to buy this book ASAP. Okie-dokie!

  • Thea
    February 18, 2014 at 10:29 am

    Thanks for the comments, everyone!

    Victoria Van Vlear – I’ll level with you, this book does have monsters. That said, it’s the slow-building kind of creepiness (rather than a GOTCHA! screamfest). I think this book has so much going for it beyond the horror elements and if you are fine with darker themes, I think you’ll be ok with The Glass Casket. I hope you give it a try!

    Camilla – HOORAY! I’m so glad you’re going to give this one a read. I’d classify it as YA, although it certainly has all kinds of crossover appeal for older readers.

    Meghan – Fingers crossed that your library picks it up shortly 🙂

    Kristen Kittscher – THANK YOU for the amazing recommendation! I completely, wholeheartedly agree with your assessment; The Glass Casket is a haunting, beautiful book and I am more than happy to sing its praises. Loudly.

    Jana – INDEED. Now read it and let me know what you think!

  • Morgan
    March 13, 2014 at 4:50 pm

    I just finished The Glass Casket last night and wholeheartedly agree with your review! It was a stunning book and very unexpected. I didn’t realize just how dark it would get; it reminded me of an original Grimm fairy tale mixed with The Village (small town, secrets, monster, dread) and that movie Little Red Riding Hood (which I haven’t actually seen). I loved the writing style and felt so keenly for the characters. It was a good mixture of reality blended with magic and fantasy, all dashed with more blood and gore than I thought possible. In my review I described it as a horror story wrapped in a mystery inside a fairy tale. Magical, macabre, frightening, and enthralling. Such a haunting read!

  • Anonymous
    July 31, 2015 at 9:59 am

    A doctor: between major cities and beautiful nature, small towns sometimes find that if those areas are part of the beautiful landscape.

  • Jennifer
    August 6, 2019 at 3:12 pm

    For real?? I mean, to each their own, but there were so many mistakes in it that I found it unreadable. It’s very clear to me, as an editor, that no one proofread this book, so I really don’t think the writing can accurately be described as “polished.” People take actions seemingly at random throughout the book, with absolutely no reason given or with contradicting reasons given within paragraphs of each other. There was a ton of “this thing happened because the author needed it to happen” going on, like when Rowan opens her eyes in the morning and “just knows” instantly that something bad has happened the night before because her clothes fit differently (which has nothing to do with the even that actually happened). And, my favorite typo of all time: Rowan says “I wish I could get away from all this,” and someone responds, “Ah, but there is.” I respect your opinion, but I have to disagree and say that this is quite possibly the worst book I’ve ever read in my life.

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