Portal Fantasy, Young Adult

Review: Down Among the Sticks and Bones

Cover of "Down Among the Sticks and Bones," which shows a bleak, gray landscape with a single dead tree.

Title: Down Among the Sticks and Bones

Series: Wayward Children #2

Author: Seanan McGuire

Genre: Portal Fantasy

Trigger Warnings: Death, blood, menstruation

Spoiler Warning: This book is second in a series, but this review actually doesn’t have any spoilers of the first book, Every Heart a Doorway.

Back Cover:

Twin sisters Jack and Jill were seventeen when they found their way home and were packed off to Eleanor West’s Home for Wayward Children.

This is the story of what happened first…

Jacqueline was her mother’s perfect daughter—polite and quiet, always dressed as a princess. If her mother was sometimes a little strict, it’s because crafting the perfect daughter takes discipline.

Jillian was her father’s perfect daughter—adventurous, thrill-seeking, and a bit of a tom-boy. He really would have preferred a son, but you work with what you’ve got.

They were five when they learned that grown-ups can’t be trusted.

They were twelve when they walked down the impossible staircase and discovered that the pretense of love can never be enough to prepare you a life filled with magic in a land filled with mad scientists and death and choices.

Review:

Despite being the second book in the series, Down Among the Sticks and Bones takes place before the events of Every Heart a Doorway. It tells the story of Jack and Jill, two characters from the first book, and how they ended up in their magical world and also how they ended up leaving it.

The first part of this book goes over the two girls’ childhood and how they ended up having the right energy/desires/needs/whatever to summon a doorway to the horror world that is the Moors. And it was so completely relatable. The narration is insightful, and it was heartwrenchingly familiar watching these girls grow up with parents who didn’t care about them as individuals, but just wanted them to fit into the roles they (the parents) had decided on for them. I’ve often felt that my parents don’t love me, they love the version of me they want me to be, and it was so relatable it wasn’t funny.

It’s really hard to talk about any more of this book because so little of it is mentioned in the synopsis that I think too much more would be a spoiler. The girls find the doorway and end up in the Moors, and that’s where they really start to differentiate themselves. The story mostly focuses on Jack, so most of it is watching her grow and change. Which is unfortunate, because I think seeing a little bit more of Jill would explain her change a bit more. But the story is mostly about them growing into two individual people, away from the strict roles imposed by their parents.

It also ties in nicely with Every Heart a Doorway, filling in some details and making the two characters more interesting in retrospect. It’s a thoroughly engaging read. The world is excellent, the characters are solid, and even though I knew what was going to happen from reading the first book, it was interesting anyway. I’m excited for the third book!

The Wayward Children series:

Wayward Children short stores

  1. Every Heart a Doorway
  2. Down Among the Sticks and Bones
  3. Beneath the Sugar Sky
  4. In an Absent Dream
  5. Come Tumbling Down
  6. Across the Green Grass Fields
  7. Where the Drowned Girls Go
  8. Lost in the Moment and Found