A review by mariebrunelm
Water Moon by Samantha Sotto Yambao

adventurous emotional lighthearted fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.25

Book received via Netgalley.
Hana is about to take up her father’s job as a pawnbroker. This isn’t a choice she has had to make, she simply had to fit comfortably into a future already decided for her. Things were supposed to be easy, but instead on her first morning as the shop’s owner, she finds the place in utter chaos and her father gone, with hints scattered across the shop’s mysterious wares. To save him, Hana has to make a choice that might well break the comforting routine of her life and make her consider her trade in another light. For she and her father don’t deal in material stuff. They deal in choices and regrets, enabling customers to leave their shop with a weight lifted off their shoulders.
This novel that is out on January 16 is utterly enchanting. The author deals very creatively with the Japanese culture that seeps into every corner of the narrative set in Tokyo and mostly beyond. Here, paper cranes are a means of transport and the door to a ramen restaurant may open onto unexpected realities. There was a fragile but well-kept balance of light and dark, which meant that the more whimsical aspects of the character’s journey were anchored in profound feelings and reflections on choice, free will and regret.
The parts of the book I enjoyed less were purely subjective and have nothing to do with the quality of the book. Mainly, I wasn’t a fan of the very episodic nature of the narrative, with the characters jumping from one location to the next without staying long enough to really appreciate their surroundings (but that’s what comes with being chased). The romance also didn’t work for me, but it rarely does. It felt a little rushed at the beginning, and was patched up a little too quickly at the end as well after the usual fall-out. So, really, nothing major! There is plenty to love if you’re looking for a very magical, Japanese-inspired adventure set partly in our world and partly in a very dream-like land where time and space works differently.

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