Amal El-Mohtar
Completed 6/16/2026, Reviewed 6/17/2026
5 stars
This book was so much better than El-Mohtar’s This is How You Lose the Time War. The prose is sumptuous like in Time War, but it doesn’t distract from the plot. The story is devastating and beautiful. It’s about the bond between two sisters whose job is to sing to the Willows along the river to maintain the portal between the human and fae worlds. The magic system is bizarre; it is called the Grammer. And the ending is sad, but hopeful. This book has already won the 2025 Nebula for Novella and is a 2026 Hugo nominee for the same. This is turning out to be a tough year for this category as the stories are all marvelous.
Esther and Ysabel have a very tight bond. Their family, the Hawthornes, have been singing the Willows for generations, a job which now falls on the sisters. Their voices are unmatched, particularly when they sing together. Esther, being the older, has a local man interested in marrying her. He owns the next property over and thinks the match would strengthen the claim on the keeping of the Willows and the portal. However, Esther does not like Samuel Pollard at all. She is in love with Rin, a faerie that she and Ysabel met when they accidently wandered through the Willows. They were saved by Agnes Crow, a grammarian who was wandering through the fae lands. Just when Esther convinces Rin to live with Esther and her family as her lover, Pollard shows up full of anger and resentment. The ensuing chaos from that encounter ends tragically, but that is not the end of the story. (But no spoilers so I’ll leave you hanging 😊)
This is one of those books filled with tragic events, but still has a heartwarming feel to it. It emphasizes the bond between Esther and Ysabel, but also supports the bringing of Rin into the mix. The relationships are very strong, although they were just short of being problematic and maybe too co-dependent. But it makes Pollard’s actions all the more devastating. While the magic is very esoteric, the author has it developed enough that it makes sense, even if you don’t understand it.
The character I liked most was Agnes Crow. She is another grammarian, someone who wields the speaking and singing magic. She reminded me a bit of Tom Bombadil from Tolkien. She also reminded me of a rune reader I know here in Portland, so I pictured her with a wild grey perm, soft flowy black fabrics, and a mischievous smile. She is funny, whimsical, and very serious when needed.
This is another novella on the shorter side, so I can’t discuss too much without spoilers. Suffice it to say, the book was gripping. Everything happens so fast, but it flows very well. I read this book in a short day, although it took me a few days to get the review written up. I can’t tell you how much of a difference it was from Time War. It’s like night and day. This book made me feel all cozy in the end, my favorite feeling. But this isn’t a cozy read as the events in the middle are tragic, indeed. It hit all the right emotional buttons for me to give it a five star rating.






