Friday, July 31, 2009

The Last Apprentice by Joseph Delaney

My niece was reading a cool looking book a few weeks ago. I asked what it was and in true "I can't be troubled while I'm reading" bookworm fashion, she gently flipped over the soft cover to reveal the whole title and half the author's name for me. It turned out to be a new series of supernatural portions.

Delaney spins a tale from somewhere in Europe and sometime in the mid to late 19th Century. It could even be earlier or take place in North America. They tend to speak English and that's not all that specific either. This is the kind of book that intriques the reader on so many levels. The main character/protagonist is young Thomas Ward, apprentice to The Spook. Spook rids the county of evil doers and mischief makers of a supernatural kind--boggarts, witches, banes, and such. Written in such a manner to evoke the Salem witch hunts and the evil eye, we find that young Tom is well on his way to being the next Spook.

Tom is the seventh son of a seventh son and a son of a witch to boot. His new master is also a seventh son and has a boggart keeping his house and grounds. Spook likes to deal with the evil in a logical, well grounded manner. Witches are buried beneath 13 iron bars. Boggarts are bound in a square hole painted in iron, salt and special mud then covered with a custom slab of stone. Most beings can be temporarily held with a silver chain or driven off with salt and iron.

Well written, the story does move a long. However, Tom tends to be a little stupid and rather than following his instinct he chooses to follow his heart. Thus, trouble abounds and is often created by him. Like any 10 year old, he tries to rectify his mistakes, and while succeeding, he often is found out and gets extra duties to atone.