Cover Image: The Keeper of Night

The Keeper of Night

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Maybe 2.5 stars. Thank you to NetGalley and Inkyard Press for the e-arc.

I am unsure about this one. I love books that explore & personify Death (particularly the Scythe trilogy and Pratchett's Discworld novels), so the premise of this one was interesting. It also kept me engaged enough throughout to finish the book. However, too much just grated for me to rate it highly.

The very start sees 200 year-old Reapers, beings with the power over time and life & death itself, having petty fights and struggles like any teenager. And there were consistency problems throughout, some of which come with any aspect of fiddling with time. Sometimes the author has Ren freeze time to slip by someone unnoticed, or to gather/steal supplies, but other times she seems to forget she has this ability which could solve her problems. "I looked longingly at the kimonos that all the women wore. I wanted their floral fabrics and wooden sandals...instead of the corset and heavy skirts I was wearing. Just like in England, I was a spectacle." Another example, early on the author often makes a big point of Ren's (literal) cold-bloodedness compared to humans, but later "My face birthed with a sudden fever, my heart beating too fast to be healthy, pushing hot blood to my fingers that felt like white hot stars in my hands." This new hot-bloodedness was then referenced several times throughout the novel.

Despite these inconsistencies, which kept taking me out of the story, some aspects were extremely interesting. I liked the exploration of Japanese folklore, which I know very little about. The idea of the power of Death itself was also really well done. Being in the presence of personifications of Death had a physical weight to it, speaking the language of Death had physical consequences too (however, they were then often ignored by the next paragraph).

In the end, there were some too predictable betrayals and the character of Ren was too selfish to care about for me to enjoy the novel more.

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I was so intrigued by the mythology and premise behind this book! I love Japanese mythology and I was intrigued to see how it would play out with the plot. Japanese folklore is super creepy and The Keeper of the Night is deliciously dark. The MC is morally grey and it makes the story really wonderful and the story is immersive and vivid. Parts of this really remind me of Inu-Yasha, Bleach and Spirited Away.

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The Keeper of Night is such a powerful and dark tale of a biracial girl trying to find her place. I really loved how Kylie Lee Baker was able to weave in such complicated topics of racism into this YA fantasy. Reading this book is like watching a train wreck--a morbid tale where you want to look away but just can't..

Based on the adventure plot structure, Ren is a half English Reaper-Japanese shinigami. who must embark on a three-part quest to take her place in the Japanese underworld after fleeing England with her brother. Through her series of tasks, Ren continually struggles with her morality and self acceptance, embodied by her pure younger brother, and the enticing taste of power and belonging, in the form of the mysterious and beautiful Hiro..

The character development is what ties the whole book together. Ren's struggle to find herself and her place in the world shapes every action and decision. The way she and her relationships evolve is beautifully told through a beautiful morbidity.

For fans of R.F. Kuang's Poppy War or Xiran Jay Zhao's Iron Widow, The Keeper of the Night is another stunning book of a strong Asian FMC 'struggling to find her place without completely losing herself and abandoning her morals. Warning--this book does end on a semi-cliffhanger though.
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Thank you NetGalley and the publisher for this free eARC in exchange for an honest review!

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Ren Scarborough is sick of living under the British Reapers’ tyrannical authority. Although she is half Reaper, she is also half Japanese Shinigami, and her heritage has caused her to be tormented by others. Like other Reapers, she collects souls for Death, but she secretly wishes to leave London for Japan, where she will be accepted regardless of her ancestry. Ren has no choice but to run after an act of brutality exposes her banned Shinigami abilities, taking her beloved half-brother Neven with her. Ren enters the Japanese underworld of Yomi to serve the Goddess of Death after arriving in Japan. The Goddess, on the other hand, has other ideas for Ren and requires that she show her worth.

I was overjoyed to be given the opportunity to read so early. I was initially concerned because it took me about 20% of the way through to completely immerse myself in this, and there was a stunning amount of information about Ren’s world in the first few chapters. Of course, it must be explained, but I felt as though there was too much information presented at once, leaving me perplexed and overwhelmed. When Ren arrives in Japan, though, the plot starts up quickly and becomes something I can really immerse myself in.

Don’t be fooled by the slow start: this book is jam-packed with intriguing, in-depth explorations of Japanese spirits, Gods, and Yomi’s eternally dark underworld. Baker’s depiction of the hereafter, complete with shadows, terrifying specters, and a spirit community, is particularly moving. It was not just unlike any other novel I’d ever read, but it was also incredibly intriguing in its portrayal of Ren’s character. Look no further if you’re looking for a nuanced, morally grey female character.

This book’s ending, in my opinion, is what sets it apart from others in its genre. It doesn’t shy away from the dark, nor does it try to defend or justify what Ren does (in spite of the fact that she remains interesting and likeable throughout). There are certain flaws in this book, such as the pacing, but they don’t detract from a compelling plot that will leave you begging for more.

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Thank you to NetGalley and Inkyard Press for allowing me to read this ARC!


Content Warning: racism, death, violence, gore, drowning, bullying.


Ren Scarborough is tired of living under the oppressive rule of the British Reapers. Although she is half Reaper herself, she is also half Japanese Shinigami, tormented by others due to her heritage. She collects souls for Death, like all Reapers, but secretly dreams of leaving London for Japan, where she will be accepted regardless of her lineage. When an incident of cruelty leads to Ren exposing her forbidden Shinigami powers, she has no choice but to flee -- taking her beloved half-brother Neven along with her. Arriving in Japan, Ren descends into the Japanese underworld of Yomi, to serve the Goddess of Death. The Goddess, however, has other plans for her, and demands that Ren prove herself by hunting and killing three deadly Yokai. But just how far is Ren willing to go to earn the respect she has gone without her entire life?

Requesting this was a no-brainer for me. As someone who has a fascination with Japanese folklore and Shintoism, I was so happy to be given the privilege of reading this early. Initially I was a bit worried, as it took me about 20% to fully get into this, and for the first few chapters there was a shocking amount of information about the world that Ren lives in. Of course it has to be explained, but I felt that there was too much at one time, leaving me slightly confused and overwhelmed. Once Ren gets to Japan, however, the story immediately picks up, and instantly became something that I could throw myself into fully.

Don't let that slow start fool you -- this book is bursting at the seams with a fascinating, in-depth exploration of Japanese spirits, Gods, and the perpetually dark underworld of Yomi. Baker's visualization of the afterlife, with its shadows and frightening specters and spirit-village, is particularly powerful. It was not only totally unique to any other book I've ever read, but also wonderfully exciting in its execution of Ren's character. If you're after a complex, morally gray female character, look no further.

Ren is allowed her rage, her hatred of those who terrorize and underestimate her, her desire for power and her fears that she might slowly be turning into a monster worse than any she's seen before. There were times where I was irritated with her, or frustrated, but not once did I find myself unable to understand her motivations or feelings. Constantly she asks herself: Am I one or the other? Both? Neither? How does one deal with always being half, and never being seen as a whole?

The side characters who help Ren along on her journey are interesting too; her brother, Neven, is sweet, a bit of a moral compass for Ren, although I did find myself thinking that he was prone to simplifying her struggles. Hiro, who Ren slowly begins to fall for, was wonderfully mysterious but thankfully a bit more complicated than the brooding bad boy trope. To be honest, there's so much I could talk about here! It feels like I could write pages on Ren and her story, but in an effort to keep this from running too long, I'll try to quickly sum it up.

I think the ending of this book is what really makes it stand out amongst others of its genre. It doesn't shy away from darkness, nor does it make an attempt to justify or excuse everything that Ren does (in spite of the fact that she remains interesting and likable throughout). There are some imperfections here, like the pacing, but in the end it doesn't take away from a story that will leave you desperately wishing for the sequel.

Highly recommended!

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She got what she wanted but did she want what she got? Best use of Japanese Folklore in a YA novel…this one was scary and creepy and a great Story

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I really wanted to enjoy this book, but unfortunately, I found the plot to be kind of slow. I ended up getting very bored with the book less than halfway through. I might give it another try at some point, but for now it’s just not for me.

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I've really been drawn to fantasy stories that are based on cultural mythology this last year. The Keeper of Night is a story about Ren, a Reaper, in London, England in the early 1800's. She is a relatively young reaper, around 200 years old. Ren's issue is that she is only half Reaper. Her other half, from her mothers side, is Shinigami. Shinigami is the Japanese version of the English Reaper. Reapers and Shinigami's are what we know as grim reapers. Beings that harvest the souls and lead them to the afterlife.
Ren is hated by her fellow reapers for not being full blooded Reaper and when she accidentally hurts the three reapers that harass her regularly she knows she has to flee of be killed by those who rule the Reapers.
She decides to go to Japan to hopefully be embraced by the Shinigami. Her half brother goes with her. What she finds will push her to the limits of her love of her brother and what she thinks she wants to be.
Overall a masterfully told story that really brings the mythology of the Japanese Shinigami to life (so to speak). The characters are uniquely described and the tale is deeply engaging. It's a very dark tale about death and love and I cannot wait for the next book!
I think if you are a fan of Naomi Novik's Spinning Silver or Uprooted and if you enjoyed the Croak series by Gina Damico you will love The Keeper of Night.

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Wow. This book took me for so many twists and turns, and now I don’t know how to even feel. I love the morally grey characters that we get, and I adored the Japanese mythology. Every single character is not a 100% good character, and each have their own selfish issues and desires. I felt for Ren’s plight, if I also wanted to strangle her for her one-sightedness. The beginning is a bit slow, which made me DNF it, but I decided to give it a second chance because I wanted to read a story about Japanese Mythology. The beginning is a bit slow, but once you start, it gets good fast! I recommend this book to anyone who loves Percy Jackson and the essence of Spirited Away, as well as those who watch anime. This was an epic journey and I hate the author for making me desire the second book right now.

**ARC given by the publisher in exchange for an honest review***

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Thank you Inkyard Press and NetGalley for letting me review the title.

In this world traveling book, we follow the story of Ren and her brother, Neven. It is a tale of acceptance, darkness, life, death and what it means to her.

Ren’s life is a horror of hate and bullying by all those around her. She isn’t accepted by the others for her mixed blood. After an incident, she runs from England.

The book is full of dark creatures, yokai, and other beings. There are battles, mistakes, regrets, and much more.

It is the first book of a duology.

I’m not sure how I feel about the book. I liked the mythological elements and the world building. Even the blinding blackness of Yomi was visceral in description. The battles were brutal and dark. Most of the characters were more black than white. Few had any actual goodness or redeeming qualities.

I think my problem is with Ren. There were moments where she was unrealistic. Her reactions were too extreme. I was having whiplash from her responses especially with her brother.

All in all, the book was good for setting and gritty darkness. I would read the second book.

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The YA genre has had a few other titles that have addressed death in the last few years (Schusterman's Scythe series springs to mind). That said, I thought that Keeper of Night was a unique look at two different cultural mythologies surrounding the idea of where we end up after our bodies stop functioning and the personification of an entity or group of entities who are responsible for facilitating that transition. I enjoyed the characters and although I did see the twist toward the end coming, I still enjoyed the build-up to it.

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Although I found this book to be good, I wasn’t blown away by it like I have been by other books that deal with Japanese mythology. I will say that the author does a great job of taking it and making it her own by adding Reapers and creating a main character that is split between two worlds.

From the beginning, the main character Ren struggles with who she is as her parents come from different places. She doesn’t know where she belongs and has never been to where her mother was from. I never connected with Ren myself but I can see others being able to. Besides her brother, the family dynamic of the book isn’t talked about much. I do like sibling bonds but I also would have liked to understand the family as a whole better since she was so willing to runaway from it all. Ren goes through a lot of changes when it comes to her character development and by the end I would say that she could definitely lean towards morally grey.

There is one character that really stood out to me and that was Hiro. He was very mysterious but also willing to help Ren get where she wanted to be. The plot twists that involved him were very intense! I did like them and they gave the second half of the book spice.

The most interesting part of the book was the combining of two worlds: Reapers and Shinigamis. I liked learning about them but I also felt that we could have been given more details about the Reapers. The book starts off with them but by 10% Ren and her brother are already running away so we never get to see how their ranking works and what exactly goes on besides the little snippet of Ren doing her job right at the beginning.

Overall, this was a good book. I think that more details were needed for some aspects of the book but I do think readers will enjoy this one if they like Shadow of the Fox and other books similar to that.

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~Thank you NetGalley and Inkyard Press for sending me the ARC in exchange for an honest review!~

*This is a spoiler-free review, so you can read it even if you haven’t read the book yet!*

"Just like every human life, souls were unique and beautiful for a single moment, and then they were nothing but dust."

My Rating: 4.5 stars rounded up

【Trigger Warnings: violence, death】

I went into this with little to no expectations and wow this book just blew me away! It's so stunning and dark and filled with stories and magic.


Characters

Ren
Ren is definitely a complicated character, not just because she’s morally gray, but also because she felt like she didn’t fit in either world. While she’s in London people see her Shingami and when she goes to Japan and she's still seen as a foreigner. She tried to learn Japanese but she struggles with it, and so many other customs are new to her. Ren’s emotions about longing to see Japan, and wanting answers as well as how she felt like no one wanted were so real. She wanted to keep her brother Neven safe, and she wanted a new life for herself in Japan.

"I’d read so many of the human’s novels about children with dead parents, loving moths lost of childbirth or plagues. But I was not a hero with a tragic backstory, I was just a girl nobody wanted."

Neven
Oh Neven! Sometimes I wanted to protect him at all costs and other times I kinda wanted to strangle him. It was so brave of him to leave behind London to go with Ren and he’s so very kind and good, but ughh the way he acts later annoys me just like it annoyed Ren.


Plot
The plot kept me hooked the whole time and it was unpredictable too. Especially with that ending, but I shall say no more on that.


Worldbuilding
The worldbuilding is so well done!! The Japanese Folklore in it was truly interesting to read about and kept me wanting more and it was kind of terrifying, which I loved!

Yomi and all the other places they visited were well described and I liked how it's easy to differentiate between Shinigami and Reapers.

I also just loved how each of the Yokai had her own story and how they were all different from each other.

The descriptions of the Reaper’s ways in London were so interesting too! We didn’t get to see too much since most of the book is in the new worlds, but whatever I read of it was vivid and intriguing. I especially liked the descriptions of souls and how they’re each different.


Writing
The writing is immersive and the writing style is unique and fits the rest of the novel perfectly.

This was such a great book and I can’t wait for the sequel!

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The Keeper of Night was a dark, action-packed tale that caught my interest right from the first chapter and held it until the end. I loved the premise, especially the way the story delved into Japanese folklore, and the characters were compellingly flawed and morally grey, making them realistic and engaging. The text was easygoing reading, the prose atmospheric, and it was certainly a page-turner. I finished this first book interested to know how things would play out in the next. Recommended if you enjoy the darker end of the spectrum of YA fantasy. It gets 4.5 stars from me.

(This review will go live on my blog (at the link below) on 12 Oct, at which point I will also copy to Goodreads and share across social media.)

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“You can’t just decide where you come from,” Nevin said through gritted teeth, “or what you are.”
“Then who can?”

Content warnings: Animal cruelty, gore, violent sexual content

The Keeper of Night is not for the faint of heart. From the description, I expected a YA fantasy novel like Lirael maybe. TKON is much, much darker. The grimdark is real and unrelenting.

I had an exceptionally hard time with the protagonist, Ren. At the beginning of the story, Ren is subjected to repeated abuses, and it’s really unpleasant to experience this alongside her. I almost put the book down within the first 20% because I wasn’t sure how much more debasement I could handle. It’s really difficult to start a book and immediately jump into trauma and groveling; it’s not a good hook.

I appreciated that Ren had to spend years teaching herself Japanese and was not fluent when she arrived in Japan. This was so realistic! As a biracial woman myself, I was grateful for the portrayal of Ren’s ethnicity. She’s never accepted by the Reapers in London because she looks like a Shinigami to them. After years of being rejected and called a Shinigami, she goes to Japan to claim the name for herself…only to be rejected there with the assertion that she looks like a Reaper.

This level of understanding, this rejection by the people you’ve been told that you look like your entire life—this is something that immediately projected deep authenticity and true understanding for what it’s like to have one white parent and one Not. (The author’s website states that she is Japanese, Chinese, and Irish.)

As a brown child raised by my white mother and interacting with exclusively White people, I was often Othered, despite identifying culturally with them. Growing up, I dreamed of the day I would leave and find other Arabs where I would finally fit in. Much like Ren, when I finally found the people I had been searching for, I realized I didn’t fit in there either.

“Why am I the only one with no say in who I am?”

This book is a breath of fresh air by bringing traditional Japanese folklore elements to YA Fantasy and expanding on them in a unique and interesting way. The setting is more supernatural than human, but there are still subtle elements of Japanese culture present.

The plot was unpredictable, and I found myself making wild guesses about where it was all going, only to be completely wrong on every front by the end. I’m pleased that this will be a duology rather than an extensive series, and I’m intrigued to see how it all wraps up.

Thank you, Inkyard Press for the advance review copy via NetGalley! Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.

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This book was a unique story that was filled with action, Japanese folklore, and darkness. Overall, I enjoyed it.

The main character, Ren is a half British Reaper, and half Japanese Shinigami. Because of her mixed-ethnicity, she doesn't feel like she truly fits in anywhere. As a result, she decides to flee London, where she has been collecting souls for centuries, and go to Japan where she hopes to reunite with her mother whom she hasn't seen since birth.

She's a great morally grey character as she makes many decisions that were definitely questionable. I liked this aspect of her character as it has the power to engage readers and cause them to think while they're reading.

I'm curious to see where the story will continue to go. Thanks for this advanced copy!

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DNF @ 17%

I just don't really like Ren — while yes, it absolutely sucks to be singled out, her unending self-pity party and extreme cynicism and lack of empathy (for the souls she collects and even for her family) are quite off-putting; even if she has "the appearance of a young adult by human standards" (as opposed to her brother's "scrawny and graceless teenager" look) she's <i>actually</i> been around for "nearly two centuries" but behaves and thinks much like your typical self-absorbed teenager.

Baker's writing style also doesn't really work for me, weighed down by frequent lengthy descriptions and infodump tangents, and punctuated by borderline-body horror that I personally am very uncomfortable reading. (Maybe "body horror" isn't quite the right term, but it's the closest that came to mind.)

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This is a mix of folklore and legend. Characters are well drawn, particularly Ren, who's struggling with her identity. While readers probably aren't half Reapers like Ren, the identity struggle will likely resonant with readers. I've never read any Japanese mythology, so I enjoyed the fact that the author wove this throughout the story. The pace is just right for this spooky, gothic-feel story.. There are some parts of the story where a bit more detailing could've been helpful, but this was a good read overall. Those who love YA fantasy stories will want to add this to their TBR list.

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ARC REVIEW.
This is INCREDIBLE. Sometimes you read a book and you just know that it'll become everyone's favourite and The Keeper of the Night is one of those books. This book is captivating, exciting and also mildly terrifying as it dives into Japanese folklore. The characters are morally grey and complex, which is a nice change of pace from the typical protagonist. Chilling, vivid and beautiful and perhaps, my favourite read of the year so far. Thank you to Netgalley for providing this arc!

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At the helm of "The Keeper of the Night" is a British-Japanese heroine, Ren Scarborough, who is struggling with her identity as a half Reaper, half Shinigami. Torn between the two separate worlds, Ren decides to leave behind the familiar world of England to find her mother and a place in the world, where she is accepted. This leads her to accept a task from Izanami involving several herculean slayings, but she finds help along the way and ultimately, discovers herself. While I loved the aspects of Japanese mythology interwoven into the story, I never truly connected with Ren and felt disconnected from her journey throughout the book. I would recommend this for the intriguing setting and incorporation of mythology.

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