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Excerpt from The Forest of Vanishing Stars by Kristin Harmel, plus links to reviews, author biography & more

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The Forest of Vanishing Stars

A Novel

by Kristin Harmel

The Forest of Vanishing Stars by Kristin Harmel X
The Forest of Vanishing Stars by Kristin Harmel
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  • First Published:
    Jul 2021, 384 pages

    Paperback:
    May 2022, 384 pages

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"There are hundreds of ways to take a life," Jerusza told the girl on a fading July afternoon soon after the child's eighth birthday. "And you must know them all."

Yona looked up from whittling a tiny wren from a piece of wood. She had taken to carving creatures for company, which Jerusza did not understand, for she herself valued solitude above all else, but it seemed a harmless enough pursuit. Yona's hair, the color of the deepest starless night, tumbled down her back, rolling over birdlike shoulders. Her eyes—endless and unsettling— were misty with confusion. The sun was low in the sky, and her shadow stretched behind her all the way to the edge of the clearing, as if trying to escape into the trees. "But you've always told me that life is precious, that it is God's gift to man, that it must be protected," the girl said.

"Yes. But the most important life to protect is your own." Jerusza f lattened her palm and placed the edge of her hand across her own windpipe. "If someone comes for you, a hard blow here, if delivered correctly, can be fatal."

Yona blinked a few times, her long lashes dusting her cheeks, which were preternaturally pale, always pale, though the sun beat down on them relentlessly. As she set the wooden wren on the ground beside her, her hands shook. "But who would come for me?"

Jerusza stared at the child with disgust. Her head was in the clouds, despite Jerusza's teachings. "You foolish child!" she snapped. The girl shrank away from her. It was good that the girl was afraid; terrible things were coming. "Your question is the wrong one, as usual. There will come a day when you'll be glad I have taught you what I know."

It wasn't an answer, but the girl wouldn't cross her. Jerusza was strong as a mountain chamois, clever as a hooded crow, vindictive as a magpie. She had been on the earth for nearly nine decades now, and she knew the girl was frightened by her age and her wisdom. Jerusza liked it that way; the child should be clear that Jerusza was not a mother. She was a teacher, nothing more.

"But, Jerusza, I don't know if I could take a life," Yona said at last, her voice small. "How would I live with myself?"

Jerusza snorted. It was hard to believe the girl could still be so naive. "I've killed four men and a woman, child. And I live with myself just fine."

Yona's eyes widened, but she didn't speak again until the light had faded from the sky and the day's lessons had ended. "Who did you kill, Jerusza?" she whispered in the darkness as they lay on their backs on the forest f loor beneath a roof of spruce bark they'd built themselves just the week before. They moved every month or two, building a new hut from the gifts the forest gave them, always leaving a crack in their hastily hewn bark ceilings to see the stars when there was no threat of rain. Tonight, the heavens were clear, and Jerusza could see the Little Dipper, the Big Dipper, and Draco, the dragon, crawling across the sky. Life changed all the time, but the stars were ever constant.

"A farmer, two soldiers, a blacksmith, and the woman who murdered my father," Jerusza replied without looking at Yona. "All would have killed me themselves if I'd given them a chance. You must never give someone that opportunity, Yona. Forget that lesson, and you will die. Now get some rest."

By the next full moon, Yona knew that a kick just to the right of the base of the spine could puncture a kidney. A horizontal blow with the edge of the hand to the bridge of the nose could crush the facial bones deep into the skull, causing a brain hemorrhage. A hard toe kick to the temple, once a man was down, could swiftly end a life. A quick headlock behind a seated man, combined with a sharp backward jerk, could snap a neck. A knife sliced upward, from wrist to inner elbow along the radial artery, could drain a man of his blood in minutes.

But the universe was about balance, and so for each method of death, Yona taught the girl a way to dispense healing, too. Bilberries could restore circulation to a failing heart or resuscitate a dying kidney. Catswort, when ground into a paste, could stop bleeding. Burdock root could remove poison from the bloodstream. Crushed elderberries could bring down a deadly fever.

Excerpted from The Forest of Vanishing Stars by Kristin Harmel. Copyright © 2021 by Kristin Harmel. Excerpted by permission of Gallery Books. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.

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