The Gremlin’s Library: Gods of Jade and Shadow

2–3 minutes

To read

Anybody who knows me knows that I am a SUCKER for mythology. Irish, Viking, Yoruba, West African… Anything with a mythic bent and a folkloric eye is pretty much automatically my favourite. So when Silvia Moreno-Garcia announced her Gods of Jade and Shadow as a Mayan fairytale, I was sold. Unfortunately I apparently wasn’t the only one – it took six months on hold at the library for me to get it! Entertainingly enough, I then finished it in two days.

The final verdict? Gods of Jade and Shadow is incredible. Set in the 1920s, Gods follows Casiopeia Tun, unwanted granddaughter of a rich man, as she accidentally frees the Mayan god of death from his prison and accompanies him on a quest to restore his power. She isn’t given much choice – due to an unfortunately lodged bone fragment, she’s what is keeping him alive – but she’s been wanting an adventure anyway, away from her horrid grandfather and her childish, sexist cousin.

Before starting this book, I wasn’t familiar with much of Mayan folklore except what I’d picked up from other Mexican and Mexican-inspired media – Xibalba is a name I know from Road to El Dorado, Book Of Life, etc. and I’m vaguely familiar with Kukulkan, the feathered serpent. Hun-Kamé and Vucub-Kamé, however, are completely new to me – and I’ve fallen deeply in love with them. This is partly because of the rich complexity and darkness of Mayan mythology – think bright colours and mythic logic with deeply Gothic sensibilities – and partly because of the poetic prowess of Moreno-Garcia’s writing. Reading Gods of Jade and Shadow is like listening to a storyteller or watching theater; it’s deeply visual, pulling the reader along with inexorable force.

Possibly the most surprising part for me was how much I found myself invested in love stories. People familiar with my reviews know how hard it is for me to appreciate love stories – I’m both aromantic and romantically traumatized, so when Casiopeia and Hun-Kamé began to fall in love, I was concerned. Before long, though, I felt it – and even more, I felt the sorrow along with the romance. Normally, I can’t get invested in love stories because they feel too much like wish-fulfillment or contrived coincidences (which work for some people but not for me), but this one just…clicked.

Gods of Jade and Shadow is absolutely, absolutely worth your read. Moreno-Garcia is a hell of a storyteller, and I’ll be reading more of her work the moment I get the opportunity. The book is available for purchase through Penguin Random House, and probably many of your local bookstores!

One response

  1. […] more and more in love with Silvia Moreno-Garcia’s writing for a few years now, starting with Gods of Jade and Shadow in 2019, Mexican Gothic in 2020, and reading both Signal to Noise and Untamed Shore after that. Her […]

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Ama Ndlovu explores the connections of culture, ecology, and imagination.

Her work combines ancestral knowledge with visions of the planetary future, examining how Black perspectives can transform how we see our world and what lies ahead.