Review: Angelfall by Susan Ee
Angelfall is
the first book in the Penryn & the End of Days series by Susan Ee.
The story was unique and different enough in its genre for me to share it with you, just before its sequel โ World After โ is due out next month.
This might be called a young adult story, but it does not read like one. This is a dark fantasy. It goes from action to post apocalypse to paranormal and horror...all mixed together. It has darkness and grit, craziness and hope, and a new take on the angelsโ mythology.
I will try to explain all this goodness in mere words after the jump.
The story was unique and different enough in its genre for me to share it with you, just before its sequel โ World After โ is due out next month.
This might be called a young adult story, but it does not read like one. This is a dark fantasy. It goes from action to post apocalypse to paranormal and horror...all mixed together. It has darkness and grit, craziness and hope, and a new take on the angelsโ mythology.
I will try to explain all this goodness in mere words after the jump.
The story
Penryn is pushing her sister Paige in her wheelchair, her unstable mother at her side, walking quickly down the deserted streets of a town in Silicon Valley, CA, in a dystopian world after the angels went to war with the humans and razed their cities.
Then, an angel falls from the sky, five other angels on his heels. Penryn (named after an exit on Highway 80 โ a fact that can give you a hint about her mentally ill mother) watches the battle, hiding behind a truck with her mother and sister. It is a bad thing if you attract the angelsโ attention, and unintended they do!
While the five angels overtake the one with the snowy white wings, little Paige is making a small, horrified sound, and one angel hears her. Penryn tries to distract the angels, but her little sister ends up being abducted by one of the angels while Penryn is left with a dying, wingless angel at her feet.
A fragile alliance is created between Penryn, the human, and Raffe, the angel. She needs him to help her find her little sister; he needs her in order to find his way back to the angelsโ compound, where he can make himself whole again.
Thus begins Penrynโs journey to find her little sister in a world that was destroyed by these angels just six weeks before.
Danger is everywhere. The angels are deadly and menacing โ donโt get on their radar! There are human gangs roaming the streets, looking for anything they can get in order to survive. Food is scarce, and there are some creepy creatures โ cannibals (?) โ roaming the night. No place is safe.
Why was Paige abducted by angels? What do they want with a child?
Penryn is determined to find her sister; nothing can deter her from this goal. Her journey through the broken, harsh world parallels her character growth and her relations with her reluctant angel partner.
The characters
Penryn
Penryn Young is 17 when the story begins. A survivor and a fighter, she is resourceful and has a mind of her own. I like the fact that she was not some naive, innocent young girl before her world was destroyed. She had been hardened by life, her mentally ill mother, and her crippled sister. She had to fend for herself and her family in the โnormalโ world. She does not go blindly into dangerous situations โ she weighs the options until she comes to the right conclusion.
Penrynโs mother made her take a lot of self-defense courses after the disastrous day when Penryn and her father came home to find mother standing above little Paige, who was lying on the floor broken and crippled. No one knew what happened; her mother didnโt talk about it.
Penryn is fiercely loyal to her family. She is stubborn and compassionate. She is not shy about speaking her mind; sometimes she canโt stop herself from opening her mouth when it might better to shut up.
Raffe
The sword-wielding, worrier angel is rescued from certain death by a mortal girl. Of
course, he is proud, cocky, and arrogant, looking down at the โmonkeys,โ as humans
are called by angels.
Penryn is pushing her sister Paige in her wheelchair, her unstable mother at her side, walking quickly down the deserted streets of a town in Silicon Valley, CA, in a dystopian world after the angels went to war with the humans and razed their cities.
Then, an angel falls from the sky, five other angels on his heels. Penryn (named after an exit on Highway 80 โ a fact that can give you a hint about her mentally ill mother) watches the battle, hiding behind a truck with her mother and sister. It is a bad thing if you attract the angelsโ attention, and unintended they do!
While the five angels overtake the one with the snowy white wings, little Paige is making a small, horrified sound, and one angel hears her. Penryn tries to distract the angels, but her little sister ends up being abducted by one of the angels while Penryn is left with a dying, wingless angel at her feet.
A fragile alliance is created between Penryn, the human, and Raffe, the angel. She needs him to help her find her little sister; he needs her in order to find his way back to the angelsโ compound, where he can make himself whole again.
Thus begins Penrynโs journey to find her little sister in a world that was destroyed by these angels just six weeks before.
Danger is everywhere. The angels are deadly and menacing โ donโt get on their radar! There are human gangs roaming the streets, looking for anything they can get in order to survive. Food is scarce, and there are some creepy creatures โ cannibals (?) โ roaming the night. No place is safe.
Why was Paige abducted by angels? What do they want with a child?
Penryn is determined to find her sister; nothing can deter her from this goal. Her journey through the broken, harsh world parallels her character growth and her relations with her reluctant angel partner.
The characters
Penryn
Penryn Young is 17 when the story begins. A survivor and a fighter, she is resourceful and has a mind of her own. I like the fact that she was not some naive, innocent young girl before her world was destroyed. She had been hardened by life, her mentally ill mother, and her crippled sister. She had to fend for herself and her family in the โnormalโ world. She does not go blindly into dangerous situations โ she weighs the options until she comes to the right conclusion.
Penrynโs mother made her take a lot of self-defense courses after the disastrous day when Penryn and her father came home to find mother standing above little Paige, who was lying on the floor broken and crippled. No one knew what happened; her mother didnโt talk about it.
Penryn is fiercely loyal to her family. She is stubborn and compassionate. She is not shy about speaking her mind; sometimes she canโt stop herself from opening her mouth when it might better to shut up.
โWhen youโre small enough to have to look up at everyone around you, thereโs no such thing as a dirty fight. Thatโs a new motto for me. I think Iโll keep it.โ
Raffe

โMy friends call me Wrath,โ says Raffe. โMy enemies call me Please Have Mercy. Whatโs your name, soldier boy?โ
Raffe doesnโt talk much and is very self-contained. He is earth-shatteringly gorgeous, has the body of an Olympic swimmer and all, like an angel should look. Raffe has some agenda that is not clear yet โ he is high in the angelsโ hierarchy and in the middle of a political angel power struggle. It looks like he doesnโt want any part of it.
What made me smile is the fact that he is an agnostic angel, can you believe it? This is part of the uncommon angel lore in the story. What an oxymoron!
โYouโre agnostic?โ I look at him for signs of humor. โAs in youโre not sure of the existence of God?โ He is dead serious. โHow can that be? Youโre an angel, for chrissake.โ
Like Penryn, he goes through a journey of his own, slowly learning to respect Penryn, turning out to be a perfect ally in their quest.
He runs his finger tips along my cheek, caressing my face. โHush. Iโm right here.โ He looks at me with deep anguish in his eyes. Like thereโs so much he wants to tell me but feels itโs too late now. I want to stroke his face and tell him that it will be okay. That everything will be all right. And I wish so badly that it would be.
Mother
We now play a permanent game of I-am-crazier-and-scarier-than-you. And in that game, my mother is our secret weapon.
Penrynโs mother is mentally disturbed, but I am sure we donโt know yet her full role in the story. There is more than meets the eye here. Why does she collect newspaper articles about mothers who killed their children? What is this strange language she sometimes babbles in? Is it related to the old myth of the Nephilim that Raffe tells Penryn about?
โSo producing children with humans gets you damned because Nephilims are a big no-no, but anything up to that...?โ
โApparently, theyโve decided thatโs a gray zone. It could get them all burned.โ... โBut the fire can be tempting.โ
She believes in demons, and maybe she is possessed by one, or believes so. She has moments of clarity here and there, surprisingly (or not) she can be intimidating at times, but she really lives in her own world. Here is a conversation between Penryn and her mother:
โPenryn? Who are you talking to?โ My mother sounds almost frantic now.
โJust my own personal demon, Mom. Donโt worry. Heโs just a little weakling.โ
Weak or not, we both know he could have killed me if thatโs what he wanted. I wonโt give him the satisfaction of knowing I was scared, though.
โOh.โ She sounds calm suddenly, as if that explained everything. โOkay. Donโt underestimate them. And donโt make them promises you canโt keep.โ
I can tell by her fading voice as she says this that sheโs reassured and walking away.
There are some good side characters, like the leader of the human resistance, the albino angel, and the spymaster twins. There is not much written about them, but enough to get me curious.
Overall
I find this story an original one. It starts as another angels/fallen angels story, but it moves to different, uncommon territories. You know there is danger from page one. It is fast paced and very well written, has a lot of dry humor, and the dialogues are great. The banter between Penryn and Raffe is funny and clever.
โI never kid about my warrior demigod status.โ
โOh. My. God.โ I lower my voice, having forgotten to whisper. โYou are nothing but a bird with an attitude. Okay, so you have a few muscles, Iโll grant you that. But you know, a bird is nothing but a barely evolved lizard. Thatโs what you are.โ
There are hints of romance here and there, maybe hinting at things to come, but no more than that. (I love the fact that there is no love triangle here.)
โWhat if they donโt let us go through?โ I ask, trying not to move my lips. โThey will,โ he answers from the dark recesses of the backseat footwell. โHow do you know?โ โBecause you have the look theyโre looking for.โ โWhat look is that?โ โBeautiful.โ His voice is like a caress from the shadows.
There are real-world possibilities here mixed with the fantasy. What will happen to our world, to us, if a disaster strikes? Can we face it? Are we, or at least some of us, strong enough? Penryn believes in the human race. Even in a desperate situation, she still has hope.
I think Susan Ee wrote a compelling story, an intelligent plot with reliable characters. I wish she would elaborate more about the angelsโ agenda and the war that destroyed the world, but maybe it will happen in the next book.
Just a few words on the angelsโ back story. Though the term โangelโ comes from the Bible, these angels are not really Biblical. They have human reactions and political dynamics. Somehow they reminded me of the stories in Greek mythology, with the Olympic godsโ quarrels.
Here is Susan Ee (pronounced like the letter E), explaining on her blog susanee.com how she came to write this story:
Iโve known for a long time I wanted to write a novel about angels. Theyโre so fascinating. Classic angels are associated with destroying entire cities and turning people into pillars of salt. In Revelations, they are the harbingers, and quite likely the executioners, of doom. And yet theyโre portrayed as cute little cherubs or beings who bend over backwards to make us happy. Like unicorns and vampires, they must have an amazing public relations department.
So what if the PR fog cleared? What if angels were unleashed on the modern world? Would there be nothing but death and destruction? Or would there still be some room for dark adventure and romance? What would happen if one of these battle-hardened warriors had to partner up with an extraordinary victim of their apocalypse?
I just had to find out.
If you like a good, dark, entertaining read, this is the book for you! Just enjoy this fast ride.
This Wench rated it :
So, what do you think, dear Wenches? Would you dare read a book that is considered Young Adult? I have a hunch you wonโt regret it, at least I hope thatโs the case.
Great review!! Tempts me to read this book. Actually, I just might. ;)
ReplyDeleteWow I want to read these!
ReplyDeleteLoved your review Merit. The books sound really interesting. Like Shau, I'm tempted to read them.
ReplyDeleteI have heard some excellent things about ANGELFALL, which I still need to read. Nice pick!
ReplyDeleteIt's a fantastic read, with an apocalyptic touch that is disturbing and gory; as it should be. The plot weaves through you with a fluidity I can't thoroughly explain. There is no way you won't be hooked by this author's way with words.
ReplyDeleteneon power beats