A review by onceuponanisabel
The Weight of the Stars by K. Ancrum

5.0

There’s something delightfully symmetrical about starting the year with this book, after starting 2019 with The Wicker King.

Anyway, there’s this weird category of books where everything is a million times more intense than real life. Everything anyone says is deeply analyzed and meaningful, decisions are life-or-death, and every action is incredibly intentional. It’s odd, because of course, writing is this way. Everything is intentional for the author — but people don’t really act this way in my experience. So it’s a weird kind of surrealism to read a book that makes no effort to disguise that intensity, and I kind of love it. I wish the world was more intentional. I wish I were more intentional. The Weight of the Stars absolutely is one of these books (The Foxhole Court is another example that comes to mind).

I love that it’s about girls who love space — like me. I love that it’s about a found family of people healing each other and healing together. I love that some things are mysterious and some things aren’t. I loved the cameos by Jack and August from the previous book.

Not sure why it took me so long to get here since I loved The Wicker King too, but life happens, I guess.