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Roar of Sky Is an Epic Story of Empire, and One Woman’s Journey

Roar of Sky Is an Epic Story of Empire, and One Woman’s Journey

Roar of Sky

Beth Cato

Paperback

$16.99

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We first met Ingrid Carmichael in the weeks leading up to the San Francisco earthquake of 1906, which leveled 80 percent of the city and still ranks as the largest loss of life from a natural disaster in California’s history. But while the earthquake may the same, the California it takes place in is profoundly different: this United States has merged with Japan into a larger empire called the United Pacific, which has since waged war on China. As a nation at war, the Unified Pacific is in the grips of dangerous xenophobia against anyone who isn’t Japanese or white American (but especially against Chinese-Americans). As the dark-skinned daughter of a prominent geomancer, Ingrid is both insulated from public animus, and deep in the heart of a system that devalues and judges her. Because Ingrid has a secret: she is also a geomancer.

Breath of Earth

Beth Cato

Paperback

$19.99

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Roar of Sky begins in Hawaii, where Ingrid, Cy, and Fenris have fled after their confrontation with the kitsune (a fox deity, of sorts) who is living as a high-ranking official in the United Pacific, and absolutely dedicated to the destruction of all Chinese people—both in America and Asia. Ingrid was told by her father that she has a familial relationship with the Hawaiian goddess Pele, so she braves the active geology of the Hawaiian islands (as a geomancer, this kind of seismic activity can be deadly) in order to find out more about her kin. Ingrid requires a wheelchair at times, her nervous system burned out by the overflow of magic she used to protect herself from the kitsune previously. Her visit to the crater of Kilauea is tactile and detailed, with the kind of description that feels lived in. She thrills at her feelings of connection with the landscape, even while acknowledging she will never quite be Hawaiian, even if it is her family’s heritage.

Call of Fire

Beth Cato

Paperback

$14.99

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As Ingrid, Cy, and Fenris move through the United Pacific, they encounter and re-encounter people who are pivotal to both their pasts and their futures—everyone from Theodore Roosevelt (recast as ambassador in this reality) to Ingrid and Cy’s fathers, mentors, sisters, and friends. Ingrid has always been a likable character, though her naïveté occasionally rankled. That sense of innocence has been dampened by the real limitations she’s encountered, though it never quite goes away entirely. (Ingrid, after all, has been somewhat sheltered.) Some would call not naïveté but optimism. It is weakness and a strength, and both are put on full display in Roar of Sky. This trilogy is as much the story of empire as it is of one woman, and her journey both within and without.

The complete Blood of Earth trilogy is available now.