Paperback, 320 pages

English language

Published Sept. 24, 2024 by Feminist Press at The City University of New York.

ISBN:
978-1-55861-331-7
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In the gripping first novel in the Daughters of the Empty Throne trilogy, author Margaret Killjoy spins a tale of earth magic, power struggle, and self-invention in an own-voices story of trans witchcraft.

Lorel has always dreamed of becoming a witch: learning magic, fighting monsters, and exploring the world beyond the small town where she and her mother run the stables. Even though a strange plague is killing the trees in the Kingdom of Cekon and witches are being blamed for it, Lorel wants nothing more than to join them. There’s only one problem: all witches are women, and she was born a boy.

When the coven comes to claim her best friend, Lorel disguises herself in a dress and joins in her friend’s place, leaving home and her old self behind. She soon discovers the dark powers threatening the kingdom: a magical blight scars the land, and …

3 editions

reviewed Sapling Cage by Margaret Killjoy (Daughters of the Empty Throne, #1)

It’s a nice read even if I’m not entirely the intended audience (or am I?)

I'm uncomfortably well versed in the Margaret Killjoy Extended Universe. I listen to most of her podcasts and have done so for a while. I've read (and own) several of her books. This book may be the most Margaret of all the ones I have read. That's neither warning nor endorsement; it's a statement of fact.

The Sapling Cage intersects the strictly controlled genres of young adult coming of age fiction and what I'd call low fantasy, with some of of the obligatory Killjoy eldritch horror elements. Both of these genres are laden with tropes. Fantasy as a genre usually handles the battle between good and evil, where good and evil are well-defined teams. It supplies two components: a mapping from moral alignment to aesthetics (good knights/evil orcs), and a theory of magic. How these are defined usually structures the rest of the story and setting. For YA fiction, …

reviewed Sapling Cage by Margaret Killjoy (Daughters of the Empty Throne, #1)

The Sapling Cage

This is a young, trans fantasy story that begins with teenager Lorel switching places with her friend Lane to go join a coven of witches, trying to keep them from discovering that she's not a girl. It's not billed as YA, but I would give it that label--although there's a good bit of physical violence on the page, this is a coming-of-age story with a large focus on peer relationships inside a larger adult structure.

Unsurprisingly for a Margaret Killjoy book, this is a very trans story. Lorel spends the majority of her mental energy worrying about being found out, and even after her secret is partially revealed, there's still terfy antagonism and fears of acceptance. In a world with magic, I also quite appreciated the trans nuance of "do I want to change my body because other people would accept me more or because I want to change …

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Subjects

  • Fiction
  • Fantasy
  • Queer
  • Witches

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