rachelmanija: (Books: old)
rachelmanija ([personal profile] rachelmanija) wrote2025-05-28 10:28 am

Blood Over Bright Haven, by M. L. Wang



Sciona, the first woman ever admitted to the University of Magic, takes on Thomil, a janitor from a discriminated-against culture, as her lab assistant, and they both learn dark secrets about their world.

Thomil is introduced when his clan makes a desperate run across deadly ground to get to the safety of a city surrounded by a magical shield. The shield protects against bitter cold and the deadly Blight, which randomly zaps and dissolves people, but the area around the city is particularly Blight-infested. Only Thomil and his baby niece survive. When they arrive, they find that the city natives hate their race and has consigned them all as a permanent underclass.

Ten years later, Sciona, a well-to-do young woman in the city, is preparing for her magic exam to try to get into the sexist magic university, which no woman has ever passed. Though she does pass, all the male mages but her mentor hate her and hassle her. The only other person who's even remotely nice to her is Thomil, the janitor, who is assigned as her lab assistant as a cruel joke. But though Sciona is racist and classist, and Thomil is mildly sexist in an oblivious way, they find that they kind of get along...

Wang has an engaging, easy-read style for the most part, the intros to the two main characters are quite compelling, and despite the heavy-handed axes of privilege themes, Thomil and Sciona have a nice dynamic.

I said "for the most part." The exception is the magic system, which I think is basically computer programming via magic typewriters (spellographs). The wizards program a spell to access a specific area of the magical Otherrealm (which they can't see or sense in any way, so they're just plotting points on a grid) to grab magical energy or matter from it. But we get MUCH more detailed and lengthy descriptions of it, from long explanations to actual spells:

CONDITION 1: DEVICE is 15 Vendric feet higher than its position at the time of activation.

ACTION 1: FIRE will siphon from POWER an amount of energy no lower than 4.35 and no higher than 4.55 on the Leonic scale.

ACTION 2: FIRE will siphon within the distance of DEVICE no higher than 3 Vendric inches.

If and only if CONDITION 1 is met, ACTION 1 and ACTION 2 will go into effect.


The first half is Sciona and Thomil working on various spells, interspersed with very heavy-handed commentary on colonialism, sexism, and how Sciona totally gets feminism when it applies to her personally but is oblivious to all other isms. Sciona is an awful, self-centered person and Thomil is mostly perfect. Almost exactly halfway through, there is a shocking reveal. At least, it shocked many readers. It did not shock me.



It turns out that the "Otherrealm" is not some magical other dimension, but everywhere outside the city. Siphoning is the Blight, the mages all or mostly know this, and are all mass murderers/genocidaires.

The way this is written is nicely shocking - Sciona and Thomil create a spell to enable them to see the Otherrealm, and it's just his homeland - but the prologue where we actually see all his people getting killed by the Blight gives the twist away to a large degree. It's obviously something magic and unnatural, not a disease, so it's easy to guess that the siphoning is doing it. Especially when any time you see a magical shield that supposedly protects against something, and the society it's protecting is evil, you know that shield either does nothing or they're lying about what's outside. So the shield can't be to protect against the Blight. In fact, the shield causes the Blight. (I think the shield does keep it warm inside and that's its actual purpose.)

Also Sciona's nice mentor additionally runs a polluting factory that employs women belonging to Thomil's minority group and the chemicals make them infertile. Sciona does believe that all this is bad and joins the revolution, but she doesn't change all that much as a person; her political beliefs change, but she's still self-centered and awful. This was IMO the most interesting/complex part of the book, but not that enjoyable to read.



Despite what the plot description sounds like, Sciona and Thomil do not have a romance beyond occasional sexy feelings. It's a magical dystopia/dark academia, I think similar to Babel (which I could not get very far into) but less anvillicious in that it does not have literal footnotes saying stuff like "This is a racist comment and racism is bad." (In the bookshop, I have Blood Over Bright Haven tagged "If you like Babel you will like this.") Sadly for M. L. Wang, this comparative subtlety got them some reviews on Goodreads accusing them of condoning Sciona being a bad person and endorsing her beliefs.

I did not care for this book but I can see how it would work for many readers, especially if they're shocked by the twist at the halfway mark.

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