Happy Monday bookish people! I hope you’re all having a good day today.
Today I am bringing you my book review for the short novel Gallant by V E Schwaab. If you’ve read this book, let me know your thoughts down below. I’m interested because I saw lots of people’s opinons on this book ranging from the negative to the meh side of things before I read it and I think seeing these opinions are part of the reason I put this book off for so long despite loving most books by this author. Then I read it and I was annoyed at putting it off for so long because I really enjoyed it.

A darkly magical and thrilling tale of a young woman caught between the world and its shadows, who must embrace her legacy to stop the approaching darkness. The Secret Garden meets Crimson Peak, perfect for fans of Neil Gaiman, Holly Black and Susan Cooper.
Fourteen-year-old Olivia Prior is missing three things: a mother, a father, and a voice. Her mother vanished all at once, and her father by degrees, and her voice was a thing she never had to start with. She grew up at Merilance School for Girls. Now, nearing the end of her time there, Olivia receives a letter from an uncle she’s never met, her father’s older brother, summoning her to his estate, a place called Gallant. But when she arrives, she discovers that the letter she received was several years old. Her uncle is dead. The estate is empty, save for the servants. Olivia is permitted to remain, but must follow two rules: don’t go out after dusk, and always stay on the right side of a wall that runs along the estate’s western edge. Beyond it is another realm, ancient and magical, which calls to Olivia through her blood…
My Review:
As I said, I put this book off for ages and I regret that now because I sat down and didn’t move again until I had finished the book. I really enjoyed it. It has this secluded, tense, gothic atmosphere surrounding it and everything is a bit confusing and mysterious – maybe there’s something wrong with me because I love that feeling where you are confused alongside your main character.
I especially loved that aspects that perhaps shouldn’t feel alive, very much did. For example, the house Olivia arrives at – Gallant – it’s just a house but it seems to be full of its own life and its own ideas that makes it feel like a living, breathing thing. In such a short book it is very clever to be able to give that feeling. This books gave me the feeling of a lighter version of A Study in Drowning by Ava Reid, which I also love.