The Prison Healer
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Booklist Review
Seventeen-year-old Kiva runs the infirmary in Zalindov, the imposing prison infamous for its brutality. News from outside rarely penetrates, though inmates know of the rebellion led by Tilda Corentine, who claims she is the rightful queen. Kiva's hands are full seeking to cure a deadly plague, appeasing the warden as his reluctant spy, and fighting her attraction to a mysterious new prisoner. When Tilda is captured, Kiva is ordered to keep her alive for the Trial by Ordeal, a legendary series of elemental challenges. A coded message from Kiva's family also arrives with a similar message, promising rescue. Kiva volunteers to take Tilda's place to buy time, though she lacks the elemental magic only royalty holds. Though the Trials themselves are relatively anticlimactic, this dark fantasy, first in a series, is thrilling as a contained "bottle episode," which positions eight kingdoms as a vague backdrop that contrasts sharply with the violent immediacy of prison life. Noni's gambit of beginning the real story--that of who Kiva is--toward the novel's end will energize some readers and alienate others.
Publisher's Weekly Review
Kiva Meridan, 17, has been locked inside Zalindov prison since she and her father, Faran, were apprehended a decade earlier for suspected treason against the crown. Faran served as the prison's healer until he died, leaving Kiva to inherit the role. Over the years, her relatives have smuggled in notes pledging rescue, but she's losing hope when the recently captured Rebel Queen, Tilda Corentine, arrives in Zalindov's infirmary. Though Tilda is ill and unconscious, the warden gives Kiva just one week to prepare her for Trial by Ordeal--four nigh-impossible elemental challenges that the woman must survive to prove her innocence. Shortly thereafter, Kiva's family sends a message: "Don't let her die. We are coming." Despite Kiva's best efforts, Tilda fails to improve, so to buy their saviors time, Kiva volunteers as her champion. Subplots involving an incurable prison-wide plague and the arrival of a handsome new inmate, Jaren, add mystery and romance to this high-stakes trilogy opener from Noni (the Whisper series). The pacing is leisurely and not every reveal bears scrutiny, but emotionally rich characters invest readers in their fates and drive the tale to a mind-boggling close. Ages 12--up. Agent: Danielle Burby, Nelson Literary. (Apr.)
School Library Journal Review
Gr 8 Up--Kiva Meridan has spent most of her life as a prisoner of Zalindov, where the rulers of Wenderall's eight kingdoms send the worst of the worst. Imprisoned as a child with her father, she became the prison's healer and an informant to the ruthless warden, Rooke, who runs the facility. The uneasy rhythm of Kiva's life changes when the Rebel Queen is caught and sentenced to Trial by Ordeal, a punishment meted out to the most dangerous criminals. If the woman survives, she is innocent and will be let free--but no one has ever survived, and certainly not someone as deathly ill as the blind Rebel Queen. Kiva volunteers to take her place after receiving a coded message from her family: "Don't let her die. We are coming." Kiva is a largely unsympathetic character, and her romance with inmate Jaren is uncomfortable, mainly because she repeatedly tells him she isn't interested. There are a variety of red flags, including the casual treatment of guards assaulting and raping prisoners. Several side characters and plots feature uncomfortable ableism: a guard's magical prosthetic that functions better than her hand, the Rebel Queen's blindness and how her story concludes, the stigmatization of a guard with an STI, and a variety of ableist metaphors. Jaren has "honeyed" skin and blue eyes, Kiva has green eyes, and Rooke and some of the guards have dark skin. VERDICT An easy pass in favor of readalikes by Sabaa Tahir, Sarah J. Maas, and Tahereh Mafi.--Ness Shortley, Horton M.S., Pittsboro, NC
Kirkus Book Review
Prison life gets even more punishing in this fantasy series opener. Seventeen-year-old Kiva Meridan is 10 years into a life sentence at "death prison" Zalindov. She's succeeded her late father as the titular prison healer, dosing patients with herbs and possessing extensive, modern medical knowledge of bacteria, viruses, and immune systems. Aside from cheerful innocent/MacGuffin Tipp, Kiva befriends few fellow prisoners and even fewer guards, most of whom are harshly abusive. While Naari, a new female guard, and Jaren, a handsome new prisoner, chip away at her frozen facade, Kiva volunteers to undertake an epic Trial by Ordeal on behalf of the Rebel Queen, the newest political prisoner. Under pressure to save her friends, the Rebel Queen, and herself--and losing hope of rescue or release--Kiva faces four elemental magic Trials sans innate talent. In between grueling, gruesome spectacles, Kiva also acts as an epidemiologist, tracking down an illness plaguing the prisoners. The claustrophobic setting--evoking the horrors of a Siberian gulag or Nazi concentration camp--exudes dread and brutality; levity and lightness are minimal. A predictable romance ensues, and generic fantasy clichés abound--royals and rebels, lost heirs, vague magic--hastily concluded with a trite plot twist and setup for a sequel. Most main characters read as White; there is a diversity of skin tones in this fantasy world. Readable but not remarkable, yet another grimdark political fantasy. (map) (Fantasy. 15-adult) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Reviews
Seventeen-year-old Kiva runs the infirmary in Zalindov, the imposing prison infamous for its brutality. News from outside rarely penetrates, though inmates know of the rebellion led by Tilda Corentine, who claims she is the rightful queen. Kiva's hands are full seeking to cure a deadly plague, appeasing the warden as his reluctant spy, and fighting her attraction to a mysterious new prisoner. When Tilda is captured, Kiva is ordered to keep her alive for the Trial by Ordeal, a legendary series of elemental challenges. A coded message from Kiva's family also arrives with a similar message, promising rescue. Kiva volunteers to take Tilda's place to buy time, though she lacks the elemental magic only royalty holds. Though the Trials themselves are relatively anticlimactic, this dark fantasy, first in a series, is thrilling as a contained "bottle episode," which positions eight kingdoms as a vague backdrop that contrasts sharply with the violent immediacy of prison life. Noni's gambit of beginning the real story—that of who Kiva is—toward the novel's end will energize some readers and alienate others. Grades 9-12. Copyright 2021 Booklist Reviews.
Publishers Weekly Reviews
Kiva Meridan, 17, has been locked inside Zalindov prison since she and her father, Faran, were apprehended a decade earlier for suspected treason against the crown. Faran served as the prison's healer until he died, leaving Kiva to inherit the role. Over the years, her relatives have smuggled in notes pledging rescue, but she's losing hope when the recently captured Rebel Queen, Tilda Corentine, arrives in Zalindov's infirmary. Though Tilda is ill and unconscious, the warden gives Kiva just one week to prepare her for Trial by Ordeal—four nigh-impossible elemental challenges that the woman must survive to prove her innocence. Shortly thereafter, Kiva's family sends a message: "Don't let her die. We are coming." Despite Kiva's best efforts, Tilda fails to improve, so to buy their saviors time, Kiva volunteers as her champion. Subplots involving an incurable prison-wide plague and the arrival of a handsome new inmate, Jaren, add mystery and romance to this high-stakes trilogy opener from Noni (the Whisper series). The pacing is leisurely and not every reveal bears scrutiny, but emotionally rich characters invest readers in their fates and drive the tale to a mind-boggling close. Ages 12–up. Agent: Danielle Burby, Nelson Literary. (Apr.)
Copyright 2021 Publishers Weekly.School Library Journal Reviews
Gr 8 Up—Kiva Meridan has spent most of her life as a prisoner of Zalindov, where the rulers of Wenderall's eight kingdoms send the worst of the worst. Imprisoned as a child with her father, she became the prison's healer and an informant to the ruthless warden, Rooke, who runs the facility. The uneasy rhythm of Kiva's life changes when the Rebel Queen is caught and sentenced to Trial by Ordeal, a punishment meted out to the most dangerous criminals. If the woman survives, she is innocent and will be let free—but no one has ever survived, and certainly not someone as deathly ill as the blind Rebel Queen. Kiva volunteers to take her place after receiving a coded message from her family: "Don't let her die. We are coming." Kiva is a largely unsympathetic character, and her romance with inmate Jaren is uncomfortable, mainly because she repeatedly tells him she isn't interested. There are a variety of red flags, including the casual treatment of guards assaulting and raping prisoners. Several side characters and plots feature uncomfortable ableism: a guard's magical prosthetic that functions better than her hand, the Rebel Queen's blindness and how her story concludes, the stigmatization of a guard with an STI, and a variety of ableist metaphors. Jaren has "honeyed" skin and blue eyes, Kiva has green eyes, and Rooke and some of the guards have dark skin. VERDICT An easy pass in favor of readalikes by Sabaa Tahir, Sarah J. Maas, and Tahereh Mafi.—Ness Shortley, Horton M.S., Pittsboro, NC
Copyright 2021 School Library Journal.Reviews from GoodReads
Citations
Noni, L. (2021). The Prison Healer . HarperCollins.
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Noni, Lynette. 2021. The Prison Healer. HarperCollins.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Noni, Lynette. The Prison Healer HarperCollins, 2021.
Harvard Citation (style guide)Noni, L. (2021). The prison healer. HarperCollins.
MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)Noni, Lynette. The Prison Healer HarperCollins, 2021.
Copy Details
Collection | Owned | Available | Number of Holds |
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Libby | 1 | 0 | 13 |