In Kristin Cashore's début, a Graceling is a person with a preternatural power of sorts. Some Graces allow great skill at fighting, or mind-reading, or anything else that might be useful in a fantasy novel.
Katsa has a very special Grace, one that's very useful, but not one that she wants: the Grace of Killing. She's the niece King Randa of the Middluns, and was noticed from a very early age; the king now uses her to enforce his rule across the land: she is his assassin, his best soldier, and is known throughout the kingdom for her ferocity and blood-lust.
Those few who see beyond her differently coloured eyes, and her forced shows of violence, know she is not like that. She hates what she has to do, and with a few highly-placed friends -- the Prince, for one -- has established a secret Council that spans many lands, dedicated to the protection of the people.
One kingdom needs no help, though: that of King Leck, the only peace-loving king in the land. Except, the father of Leck's wife has gone missing, presumed kidnapped -- he's also the father of the King of Lienid, and if something isn't done soon, there could be war... Throw into the mix a man with a Grace that makes him unstoppable or killable, and you have a situation...
And a good début.
The editor who acquired it is in fact the same editor who acquired Joe Abercrombie and Patrick Rothfuss for Gollancz, both excellent authors, though different in tone from Cashore. In line with the United States marketing of this book as a Young Adult, while there is violence in Graceling it's not too gritty and there's no swearing. I'm having difficulty comparing it to either Rothfuss or Abercrombie, and whilst it has comparisons to the début of Robert Redick, The Red Wolf Conspiracy, in terms of style and readability, that one doesn't work either.
Graceling is well-written, very accessible, and very entertaining. It's not a book that's going to win awards, and I don't think it will achieve quite the success of Rothfuss and Abercrombie, but it is a book that I could see a lot of people enjoying. The characters are interesting, there's enough violence to keep me satisfied -- tempered with the odd bit of love -- and the villain is rather dastardly indeed.
It has been remarked upon, with a groan by some, that this story features seven-bloody-kingdoms, and some dodgy names, something that, for some reason, is incredibly common in many fantasies. Well, that's true. There are some other flaws, also: I'd have liked to have actually seen some motives behind what the villain does, (though I expect "madness" would be a good summary), but this is apparently to be explored in Cashore's next book, a prequel. Towards the middle of the book, I began to suspect the identity of the villain, and was proved right, but the ending did surprise me, and it's a twist I liked.
I'll be interested to see what Katsa gets up to after the prequel, though luckily there's no cliffhanger ending in Graceling to keep me frustrated for several years. A solid début, Graceling is a book I had a great deal of fun reading; entertaining and fast-paced, it kept me quiet for a few hours!