On this seemingly suicide mission Mautiaine is allowed to choose from the other prisoners those who will accompany him to his appointed rendezvous. Not long out and they run into a mob of locals eager to apprehend the apparent escaped prisoners. From there things only get worse, eventually leading them into the contested lands, a place ravaged by the magic of earlier wars and now unstable. On top of this, Mauritaine is not sure what he is supposed to be finding for the queen, only that he is to make it to his destination before time runs out. And Queen Mab, the leader of the Unseelie people, is planning to attack.
My first instinct was to put down Midwinter after the first chapter. It just didn't immediately grab my attention. The characters seemed a little too predictable-- a fallen military hero, a feisty woman with a troubled past, a scheming nobleman. There are several memorable pieces of this novel though. The contested lands is an interesting idea that I wish played a bigger part in the story, as is the flying city of Queen Mab with it's secret cache of religious Arcadians. But these elements don't meld very well into a smooth story. I'm still not really sure how Mauritaine realized what it was the queen had sent him to find.
My Recommendation
All in all, Midwinter by Matthew Sturges is a well written novel, yet I'm left feeling that there's something missing. I'd be interested in seeing future novels by Matthew Sturges, but I can't count Midwinter among my favorites.
Midwinter by Matthew Sturges
Printed by Pyr
345 pages
Midwinter by Matthew Sturges is available at Amazon.com
Pyr Publishing provided me with a free review copy of Midwinter