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Once Was Willem is a standalone dark fantasy/horror set in the medieval English village of Cosham. Once-was-Willem was a dead peasant child brought back to life a changed monster through an ill-advised bargain. Rejected by his parents and the villagers, he flees into the surrounding wilderness. But when an evil comes for the other children of Cosham, it is up to Once-was-Willem and a ragtag team of rejected monsters to pick up the fight.

I thought this book was absolutely fantastic. Even though I personally do not like horror, I did not find this all that horrific so that was a huge plus for me. There were certainly horror elements and pretty dark events, but this book felt really wholesome (in as much as it could be) and uplifting somehow. There’s a ton of bloody action, body horror, and sadness without weighing down the ultimately hopeful ton of the story.

Narrated to us in first person by Once-was-Willem, the writing style told in his voice felt very true to the setting and added to its character and charm. Honestly, I was immediately won over from the first chapter. Once-was-Willem recalls the events of his monstrous second life and life in Cosham prior to all that. Between bouts of terribleness, he was just so lovable and charming, leading an honorable life that yearns for tolerance if not acceptance. And in his fight for the innocent, he gathers a few fellow monsters and makes a found family of his own.

Once Was Willem is an excellent dark fantasy standalone that tells a horror story with uplifting charm.

*Thank you Little Brown Book Group UK for the eARC via NetGalley

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'Once was Willem' is an interesting and curious novel. Or at least it is to me. I am more used to stories who focuses a lot on one character's adventure, sometimes with multiple sotryline or plotline, but all converging around one character (the main character). Here, I have a different impression. While Once-was-Willem (the narrator) is definitely an important piece of the narrative, I would say Caradoc is more at the epicenter of it, bringing various other personnage together. We learn about different lives and events, slowly building to a alliance of forces against Caradoc.

It might have been something I wouldn't enjoy normally, but the book found me at the right moment. Especially since the medieval aspect of the story was well present, even in the narration, a fact I greatly appreciated. Once-was-Willem is the narrator, telling us the story in first person, which is something I tend to struggle with, but worked quite well here, even if I sometimes wondered how our narrator knew about the events he narrated.

I found the story rather slow going, not for a lack of actions, but because it wanders in different places and lives, creating something like a shattered effect, then building the story together. It's easy to see where it is going, but in an knowingly done way. Interesting. The various elements of christian and norse mythology as well as english folkore were the most delightful for me, adding a layer of magic and otherwordliness I crave for in fiction.

I can't say I was super invested in any charaters, because the narration has something of a distance (a tale told later, dimming the strength of the tension at times, while still keeping a good level of it throughout the story). It didn't hinder my enjoyment though, and despite the medieval-ish style of writing, it was an easy and quick read, with satisfying level of horror.

Overall, a great read, curious in some aspect but defintely working for what it is aiming to tell !

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Once Was Willem 😢 I just wanted to protect him! This wasn’t what I was expecting at all in the sense that it was a bit more whimsical than I was picturing, but I really enjoyed it! The cast of characters were so likeable and I quite enjoyed that the bad guy was just bad - non of this morally grey stuff here. I would definitely read a sequel if one ever happened.

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Once Was Willem by M.R. Carey is so so good. I rated it 5 stars because I couldn't give it more. For me it's 6 stars! Loved this plot and characters sooo much! I totally recommend everyone to read this book as fast as they can.

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“Then think of how the world changes, when it passes out of summer into winter. Or think of worms and caterpils, how they knit themselves a velvet coat and come out of it with wings on their backs. You cannot say change is unnatural when all of nature bends to it."

The perfect dark medieval fantasy. I loved this book from the first page—the language, the dry humour and the intricate detail all created an immersive, compelling read.

Our narrator (the titular ‘once was Willem’) claims to be a monster, and perhaps he is. But I could not help but find him sort of adorable. I love a non-human character who is trying to work out how to fit into the world (veryyy different books but Murderbot does come to mind!). He wasn’t present for all the action of the story, but his chapters were always my favourites.

The setting of the village of Cosham was vivid and wonderfully detailed—inserting small asides about different residents of the village gave an expansive feel to the world.

For me, the heart of the book was the relationships between people—the way they change each other, for better or for worse; the ties they owe each other, even when they have done wrong or been wronged in the past. It’s about complicated communities and children doing their best to improve worlds damaged by adults. I was not necessarily expecting this book to move me so much, but in its own monstrous way, it did. Five stars and I can definitely see myself returning to this one for a reread!

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3,5 stars

"Once was Willem" had an interesting premise, but I didn't really enjoy the writing style and the story didn't really manage to suck me in.

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Once Was Willem manages to be fun, heartbreaking, magical, and dark all the same time. I don’t really want to give anything away about the plot so I’ll just say that I loved the various monsters we meet. I also really enjoyed the self-aware ‘I’m telling you a story’ style of narration and I thought that the use of archaic language was brilliant—it’s enough that it firmly sets the story within the medieval period, but not so much that it overwhelms the reader.

Aside from the vividly sketched loveable and loathsome characters and wonderful use of language and narration, the story also gets major points for being unlike anything else I’ve read in recent memory!

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What's this? M R Carey's latest is a rewrite of Seven Samurai/The Magnificent Seven, but with a village threatened by an evil necromancer and the samurai/cowboys replaced by a bunch of fantastical characters. In other hands it could have fallen flat, but in Carey's it just about works. Mainly due to the main character, and narrator, the undead revenant Once Was Willem and the other characters who join him. I could go into details about each of them, but part of the fun of the book is in our first encounter with each of them. Hopefully this won't be the first, and only, encounter we have with 'The Seven'.

Thanks to NetGalley, Orbit and the author for an advance copy.

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I thought this was a really solid book and I really liked the dark elements. I'm keen to read Carey's other books now.

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I enjoyed this book. It didn't hook me in so thoroughly that I was desperate to return to it, but it was beautifully written and I loved the characters

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Part folklore part history part fantasy, a good story with intriguing characters and decent world building, the ending left it open for ore methinks

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