I understand why this was such a talked-about book when it came out years ago. It’s very intriguing. In her grief of losing her brother, Fox, she finds out she is a Bone Witch by accidentally raising her brother back to life. She tells her story to a Bard while in exile. We do not know what she did to be exiled, but we know that she is someone with extraordinary powers. Tea tells her story from when she raises Fox, through her training as a Bone Witch. She is a little bit of an unreliable narrator because the events are all coming from her perspective. What we do learn is that she is someone who definitely chafes a little bit at authority and often questions her mentors. She also has a good sense of what is right and wrong and is a bit inflexible at times. She also has a lot of power and likes the power. A recipe for going rogue. I do like the world-building of this story. The witches are kind of like geishas in a way. They are trained in the arts and entertain in the tea houses. They are also trained in martial arts. Bone witches are revered but also feared. Makes sense because they can raise and control the dead, but they also have an important role in combating the Daeva, dragon-like creatures that, left unchecked, can destroy cities. I am intrigued to see where this series goes because we do not learn why she was exiled, but we get a little bit of a clue with one cliffhanger of an ending.
