

But since then, she's traveled the country with her rock-star mom, and has since grown out of touch with her faerie friends. Hell, they were her "imaginary" friends when she was a kid. And having already read Melissa Marr's Wicked Lovely and Elizabeth Bear's Blood and Iron, a lot of this book felt very, very familiar to me, even though this book was published first.Still, I enjoyed it, but mostly for the romantic elements than anything else, though Black does have some lovely bits of prose in her pages.The premise: Kaye's always seen faeries. I'm NOT a fan of faeries, and read this solely because I was interested in Black's work. If you're a fan of faeries, you should check this out. There are two more books on the series that I want to check out – as well as other books by Holly Black.Also at Spoilers and Nuts Read more Also, I had a feeling throughout the book that I didn't know for sure who was friend and who was foe, and I quite enjoyed that.Tithe is a nice story, easy to read and like. And the other characters are also quite good – especially Roiben, the romantic partner and not-quite-hero. Yet she was able to make friends on both places, without changing who she was (well, kind of, but saying why would be spoiler-ish).

She fitted well in the world of faeries, and was really weird in her own world. That is always good in a story, and is great for character development (or, like Calvin's father would say, it builds character).The story is pretty much focused on Kaye, and I liked her as character. These twists give some sobriety to the story – it is not all easy, and bad things happen.

That piece of familiar plot was very nice, even if it took dark twists. The transition between New Jersey and the Otherworld was very well done.But what I really liked about Tithe were all the myths (mostly Celtic) that were woven in the story. It was pretty much a different country with different rules and weirder habitants. The faery world was not a easier world where everyone was super powerful and throwing giant balls of fire around. Going from “our” world into a new, fantastical (and where physics don't usually apply) world doesn't convince me much. Of course she will then enter a world of peril and treason, and learn things about herself that she could never have imagined.The first aspect that I'll like to point out about Tithe is that it is Urban Fantasy. She tries to reconnect with her faery friends, only to discover much has changed. It all changes when she returns to her childhood house, to live with her grandmother. As a teenager she followed her mother in the rockstar lifestyle, spending most of her time in bars or helping her mother sober up, and very little in school. As a child she could see and talk to faeries (even if everyone else though it was her imaginary friends). Tithe is the story of Kaye, a sixteen-year old whose life has never been normal.
