(11/5/2022)
The God of Endings follows the life of a ten-year-old girl, Anna, who died in the 1830s of tuberculosis. The book opens with the Anna describing her home life with her father, a gravestone carver, and brother, Eli. With a tuberculosis epidemic, Anna's father is busy making the gravestones for the townsfolk. Aware of his fate, her father, who is not named, begins making his gravestone, inscribing it with a verse from Donne's tenth Holy Sonnet, "Death, be not proud." However, Anna discovers that he did not finish the stone, and she decides to finish it. Before dying, Anna's father wrote to Anna and Eli's grandfather, a man the children did not know. However, Anna's grandfather sets Anna's fate when she dies of tuberculosis. He drinks her blood when she is near death, turning her into an immortal vampire.
The remainder of the book is split between Anna, later called Anya, and Colette, whose story begins in 1984. Her grandfather sends Anya to Europe with his butler, Angoston, but he does little to prepare Anya for her new way of being in the world. Anya begins to learn about her new life and instincts during the journey. She is introduced to new cravings, urging, and powers but doesn't understand them. Anya's story begins with that journey and continues through France, Germany, and Egypt. Out of fear of herself, she isolates herself from local populations learning how to feed her thirst for blood without killing people.
Colette has grown into her character, understanding her vampiric needs and managing her strong impulses. She has opened a preschool at her grandfather's home. Colette's fears begin when she discovers that she likely has gruesome blackouts. Her worries are crystalized around the coming of Czernobog, the God of Endings.
Ms. Holland has written a rich, character-driven novel that explores the emotions of Anya/Colette as she works to reconcile her needs as a vampire with her guilt and anguish about what those needs require. This conflict of emotions is presented in a gentle way, present but not overwhelming the characters. As Anya begins to understand her new life and Colette fears her blackouts and Czernobog, Ms. Holland draws the reader in with a careful exploration of their fear and resignation to this life.
Anya/Colette's strong moral compass is the center of this story. It is also a story of beginnings and ends, good and evil, constraint and abandon. There are no tidy resolutions to the conflicts. Instead, the reader is guided to a place of understanding.
The God of Endings is a vampire story that does not focus on gore or horror but rather on the human story, which I found compelling and engaging. Anna/Anya/Collette is a character that I will remember. Indeed, as I finished the book, I found myself missing her.
"Together, we are starving in the darkness, sinking, brittling, growing gaunt, our only hope some mysterious clemency that may never come."