How Does Seasonal Fears Follow Up to Middlegame? [Review]

Posted 27 April 2022 in review /2 Comments

Banner with text that reads Fiction Review: Seasonal Fears by Seanan McGuire, displayed to the left of the cover of the book. The book cover is a realistic leaf with green to brown gradiant on a black background.

Seasonal Fears
by Seanan McGuire
Source: ARC/NetGalley
Published: 10 May 2022
Publisher: Tordotcom (Macmillan)
Length: 496 pages

Series: Alchemical Journeys
Genre: Speculative fiction
Target Age: Adult (suitable for +16)

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Summary 💬

Melanie has a destiny, though it isn’t the one everyone assumes it to be. She’s delicate; she’s fragile; she’s dying. Now, truly, is the winter of her soul.

Harry doesn’t want to believe in destiny, because that means accepting the loss of the one person who gives his life meaning, who brings summer to his world.

So, when a new road is laid out in front of them—a road that will lead through untold dangers toward a possible lifetime together—walking down it seems to be the only option.

But others are following behind, with violence in their hearts.

It looks like Destiny has a plan for them, after all….

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Review ✍🏻

I’m going to compare Seasonal Fears to Middlegame – my darling, a top five all-time favourite of mine. It can’t be helped. Readers do not experience books in a vacuum. Especially not sequels, even sequels positioned as more spiritual successors than direct follow ups. (I just realized I drafted this entire review without including a link to my original Middlegame review, so. Here is a link.)

I did not expect Seasonal Fears to hold a candle to Middlegame. That would have been an impossible task for any novel. That impossibility stems from the fact that two of my favourite aspects of Middlegame cannot be recreated. Once they had been done, they were done. If you’ve read and loved Middlegame, you might guess what those aspects are.

The first aspect was the slow build and gradual reveal of the alchemical world and what the heck was actually going on. That was one part of Middlegame that I found delightful – learning about alchemy and the Doctrine and how Rodger and Dodger have truly been affecting the world. The awe factor I got from the unfolding worldbuilding in Middlegame is absent from Seasonal Fears simply because it’s already been done.

The second aspect may be more personal. I found Rodger and Doger to be vividly realized characters who both undergo striking development arcs. I also connected with both of them on a deeply personal level. Seasonal Fears wouldn’t be able to present two characters that I would fall in love with the same way. That being said, I found Henry and Melanie to be the least compelling protagonists of any Seanan McGuire work I’ve read.

Neither had anything that drew to me to them. They felt thinly drawn, more actors in a plot than people in their own right. I certainly never felt the commitment they had to each other another, not like I did with Rodger and Dodger. I suppose one could argue that connects well to the theme of personal choice vs destiny and would they still love each other if they weren’t Summer and Winter people? Regardless, Henry and Melanie just didn’t do anything for me.

Without those two appeal factors (worldbuilding and character), what DOES Seasonal Fears have to offer? An action-adventure plot that takes the form of a deadly road trip race to a labyrinth and claim the crowns of the seasons. Further illumination on how embodiment works (ie how the seasons become ‘people’) and an expanding of the alchemical world. And McGuire’s ever-compelling, observant prose. Just because it’s missing the shining diamonds of Middlegame, doesn’t mean it’s not a good read!

I’ve still got more to say about the relationship between Seasonal Fears and MiddlegameSeasonal Fears ties more closely to Middlegame than I expected. To my delight, Rodger and Doger make more than a cameo appearance. I won’t give much away. Suffice to say they occupy more than the two pages glanced-from-a-distance than I expected. And we hear from Erin and Smita as well.

“It is later than it has ever been before in the life of the universe. The clock has started running again, and the future is here.” (7%)

The story takes place shortly after the events of Middlegame. Rodger and Doger are no longer resetting the universe. Reed’s death and the embodiment of the Doctrine echoes throughout the story, with characters knowledgeable of the alchemical world recognizing that both of those events have a notable impact on their world, if not an immediate impact on Melanie and Henry’s story. For example, Melanie’s father was a colleague of Reed’s. I actually found some of the descriptions and commentary in Seasonal Fears helped me better understand the events of Middlegame.

 “She’s not acting superior because she’s older. She’s doing it because she’s Mathematical Function Incarnate, fully manifest, and she could edit us out of existence if she wanted to.” (50%)

Also! Did I catch some hints that Asphodel may not be dead as you and I would know it?! Or is that just my overactive wishful thinking? Please do let me know if you caught that impression as well.

The Bottom Line 💭

If you enjoyed Middlegame, then don’t miss Seasonal Fears. If like me, Middlegame is one of your all-time favourite reads, just temper your expectations and you should be able to enjoy it just fine.

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Further Reading 📰

🍂 Author website
🍂 Related: Other Seanan McGuire books I’ve reviewed include In An Absent Dream and Over the Woodward Wall (a a novella tie in to Alchemical Journeys series).

What’s your favourite Seanan McGuire novel? Will you be picking up Seasonal Fears?

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2 responses to “How Does Seasonal Fears Follow Up to Middlegame? [Review]

  1. Your review has really intrigued me! I was trying to read this early but I’ve been so busy. I’m bracing myself for missing Roger and Dodger, but I hope I enjoy it even if it’s not quite up to par with Middlegame😁

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