Review: The Last Soul Among Wolves by Melissa Caruso

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Months after surviving a deadly New Years Eve party, Kembral Thorn is tired. All she wants is to be home with her newborn daughter and to have time to romance her former rival turned girlfriend, Rika Nonesuch. But as a member of the Hounds she is called to weigh in on an important will reading by a friend in dire need. At a decrepit mansion on an island accessed only by low tide a wealthy matriarch has died, leaving behind an unlikely inheritance. Brought to the island to witness, Kembral comes face to face with an unlikely group—her friends from childhood, most of whom she has not seen since, and all of whom are the potential inheritors. When the will is read, a violent inheritance is revealed concerning three relics, a ledger, and a coveted wish gained by crossing off all the people in the ledger until there is a lone victor. With no choice but to solve the case before her friends are all killed, Kembral finds herself back in the action and at her side, her girlfriend and rival, Rika Nonesuch. But uncovering the mysterious lantern of souls and the wolf who guards it will require Kembral to return into the dangerous echoes only a few months after naming the Crux year. Her blood will be a beacon to all beings across the echoes, but getting ahead of the machinations of an immortal foe will require scheming and quite a bit of danger of their own, if they are to survive.

Melissa Caruso’s, The Echo Archives returns with The Last Soul Among Wolves, commencing a mystery involving cursed relics, rival sapphic agents, and empyric beings, across multiple layers of reality. After the absolute triumph that was The Last Hour Between Worlds I wondered how this sequel would fare against such an exemplary series debut. A locked room murder mystery across a repeated hour of New Years Eve is hard to beat. Yet Caruso holds true to her characters, introducing a new layer to an already compact narrative and another impossible mystery to solve. A new locked room mystery of sorts is at play in The Last Soul Among Wolves, with a sequestered manor and a race to track down a wolf and a lantern of souls before time runs out and everyone is killed. Characters Kembral Thorne and Rika Nonesuch find their balance in this second installment, seasoned to the lower echoes and the conspiracies present at all levels of reality. But true to Caruso’s style, this mystery is anything but typical and as new elements are revealed they are forced to compromise and take unconventional steps forward. For anyone loving a well plotted mystery cloaked in numerous realities ever increasing in weirdness, The Echo Archives has this formula locked down. The romance is romancing, the mystery is uncanny, and all of it aligns a perfect finale like dominos ready to fall.

The Last Soul Among Wolves is just: two former rivals now girlfriends finding themselves the victim of yet another locked room murder mystery. Where solving said mystery is contingent on them returning to the alternate layers of reality only two months since they almost died. The Echo Archives would not be nearly as strong as it is without its solid character work. From our main perspective Kembral Thorne—Hound and mother, to her enigmatic rival: Rika Nonesuch, our potential murder victims, and a babysitting Elder dragon, Caruso has it all in hand. Alongside these individual character arcs, what makes this sequel so great is the unveiling of just how much the first novel laid the foundation for the second. Taking fruition in the depths of reality with an empyrean—the most powerful of all Echo beings— intent on control at any cost, The Last Soul Among Wolves reveals its holdings lie prior to the events of this novel. Caruso’s twists always land with the finesse of a blink step and unsettling as the very fabric of reality shifts and resettles. Digging deeper into the empyreans, the echoes, and the heartwarming relationship between Kembral and Rika, this sequel reinforces this unique fantasy world and all its idiosyncrasies. Even with new characters to discover the heart and soul of the Echo Archives remain our disparate but remarkably compatible duo finding romance between the danger. Often with no regard for the danger itself.

The intersection of mystery and fantasy is being well supplied this year and Melissa Caruso is the one leading the charge with her Echo Archives trilogy. The Last Soul Among Wolves is second in a line of extraordinary fantasy mysteries featuring unconventional characters at the helm and bonkers plotting (in the best kind of way). A little bit of Knives Out, an abundance of murder and contrasting realities, and you’ll find there is nothing quite like this mystery series. Though connected to the first novel, The Last Soul Among Wolves is an entirely new pitch than its predecessor. For one, we’re no longer stuck at a New Years Eve party for an entire book, but instead a will reading hosted in a mansion with cursed heirlooms and a collection of mismatched personalities stuck inside the manor until the case is solved. After an entire book orienting us to the Echoes and the dangers present at the lower levels of reality, it’s refreshing to get more insight into the runnings of this world and the inter Guild politics. A big part of this sequel is reconciliation for Kembral and her friends from childhood, and Rika and Kembral pursuing a romantic relationship while staying true to their Guild alliances. It’s a tough line to straddle and Caruso makes sure to tie it to some of her larger revelations. With The Last Soul Among Wolves the main word that comes to mind is “exceptional.” It’s the kind of book to venture into boldly and enjoy recklessly like all the best adventures are.

Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for providing me with an advance review copy.

Trigger warnings: death, murder, blood, grief

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Review: The Last Hour Between Worlds by Melissa Caruso

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Kembral Thorne never imagined that a turn of the new year party, her first outing since childbirth, would throw her back into the action she had been desperately trying to avoid. A member of the Guild of Hounds, Kembral’s job is to leave the prime reality and enter echoes, layers of reality beneath our own, to rescue those unluckily enough to fall through. Just as the clock strikes nine Kembral bears witness to a poisoning that leaves most of the party guests dead, but before she has time to comprehend the murders she and everyone at the manor enter an echo, one plane of reality beneath their own. Everyone is alive and well, but unable to tell they are in an echo, all except Kembral. The only other privy to this sinister shift is Rika Nonesuch, notorious thief, and master illusionist, Kembral’s rival and greatest mistake. Rika’s skills are undeniable, and together they piece that an echo relic is to blame for sending them down from the prime reality, the grandfather clock ringing out the hour. The first echo is only the beginning. At the end of each hour, a horrific murder takes place by strange figures just before they are sent down into the next plane of reality, and time resets. Growing ever enlightened to their strange circumstances, Kembral and Rika will risk everything, even their uncertain future together, to unmask the real players and reset their world before their violent reality turns permanent.

A turn of the New Year party brings on the intrigue and mystery in The Last Hour Between Worlds – a startlingly layered series debut that disentangles a campy, sinister locked room murder mystery spanning twelve different layers of reality. Featuring a postpartum agent on leave trying to stop the murders and a sapphic cat-and-mouse game between two rivals who team up to solve the case, Caruso’s latest is an ambitious cocktail with ever-changing flavors, all of which remained entrenched in my memory long after I finished reading. Caruso plunges her characters into alternate realities that grow more and more bizarre, as she untangles her complicated web of humans, echoes, and empyreans playing a dangerous game to decide the fate of the upcoming year. With twelve new realities to wade through before the game is up, The Last Hours Between Worlds introduces a new kind of fantasy mystery that completely rewrites the possibilities of its genres and the types of protagonists featured at their center. 

Wading into Melissa Caruso’s fantasy murder mystery set over twelve warped realities folding into alignment was as mind-bending as these phantasmagorical realities themselves. Set on the eve of The Crux Year, the party brought into focus could not be more unusual, apparent by the bloodshed commencing on the prime reality and dragging down beneath the echoes. As different planes of reality converge whoever makes a kill on that reality binds it to the one preceding, and the person with the most blood spilled at the twelfth and final layer of reality can dictate the outcome of the new year. Kembral Thorne, mother and fierce member of the Guild of Hounds steps into the role of unmasking the true players of the game, from the iridescent beetles swarming the house, to the mysterious masked attendants, and a horned being of pure chaos who shows up to doll out violence according to birth moon. Not all players are inhuman, from the corrupt politician directly responsible for kidnapping Echoborne children, to his spirited adversary, or the host of the evening who willingly brought the echo relic into her home – the clock driving them ever deeper into the echo planes. Superimposing a series of ever-bending realities, Caruso manages to unveil her true purpose as her characters encounter increasing violence and investigate the corruption at the heart of their evening and the motivations of all.

The Last Hour Between Worlds is a revelation in so many different ways, but largely in its central protagonist Kembral – a new mom encountering the challenge of balancing her role in motherhood and her career within the Guild of Hounds. Both are fulfilling in their own unique way but marrying the two seems impossible. Her current situation seems to prove that all the more. As she struggles to balance her diverging worlds Kembral is quite literally thrust down into ever bizarre imitations of her world where she steps back into her former shoes and learns just how she can find harmony. Like layers of a cake all with astonishingly different flavors, the echoes shift – one entangling the house in jungle vines, another an insipid rot, to a lake of blood running throughout the house lapping at our characters’ heels. Caruso attaches these layers to her mystery and everything revealed within the repeat of a single hour. Staving off reaching the twelfth and final layer, Kembral uses her talents as a Hound to untangle the truth connected to the heart of the Crux Year and the relationship with her rival Rika. The reveals to the motivations of our cast and to the true players of the game were completely illuminating, as humanity becomes a playing field and our characters puppets for the machinations of empyreans and the echo beings beneath the prime reality.

Melissa Caruso has left me completely stupefied by this inventive series debut. Playing on the traditions of Agatha Christie and the investigative duo, but integrating concepts of the multiverse and centering queer characters, Caruso puts her own stamp on the classic whodunit and the fantasy mystery crossover. Impressive in its magnitude, The Last Hour Between Worlds is a groundbreaking beginning emboldened by what is sure to be a boundary-spanning series. I’m so impressed by the twists that didn’t lose their punch and how deeply layered this managed to be. I was put through all the emotions from start to finish and though I can’t easily encapsulate the full experience of reading The Last Hour Between Worlds, it is truly brilliant and deserves to be read by everyone this November and beyond.

Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for providing this advance copy in exchange for an honest review.

Trigger warnings: blood, murder, death

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