
Night Ivy
by E.D.E. Bell
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Pub Date 4 Jul 2022 | Archive Date 21 Jun 2022
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Description
Xelle is sure in her passion for magic, but struggles to find her place within the constructs that enable its study. Night Ivy offers the first verse of a wandering bard’s tale of fancy and fantasy, amidst the spires and shadows of the seven towers of Alyssia.
A Note From the Publisher
Content Notes: Night Ivy is told from the perspective of a character with anxiety disorders. Content is gentle throughout, including instances of romance, manipulation, and intent to harm or abduct.
Marketing Plan
Night Ivy is the first book in a new world where the author intends to tell many stories. Xelle’s tale is character-driven fantasy, not bound by specific story structures. While the book has been carefully edited and reviewed, the author does not always follow strict guidelines for formatting and language.
The novel release date is 04 July 2022, and we welcome any opportunity to promote this title in advance. We are a small press who has struggled greatly through the pandemic, and hope so much for this, our editor’s book, to be seen and enjoyed so we can continue to bring stories around the world to life.
We welcome blog posts and reviews. The author is available for interviews and podcasts. We encourage interested booksellers, libraries, schools, or clubs to request print ARCs.
Thank you so much for your interest and support.
[Image Description: The cover is dark as night, yet highlighted by a mix of glowing green bricks and wandering purple ivy. The title and author name are handwritten in tall, thin letters in a shade of white.]
Available Editions
ISBN | 9781945009846 |
PRICE | |
Featured Reviews

This book feels like a fairy tale, a sweeping song. The prose are so good and really create the atmosphere for it to feel so magical, but so real and imaginable. This book reminds me a lot of The Singing Hills Cycle by Nghi Vo, one of my favorite series.
I love the way gender, sexuality and mental health were all portrayed in this book- themes you don't see explored in fantasy a lot and it was so wonderfully done here. I really connected with Xelle through these aspects of their character as it felt very familiar and comfortable to me, seeing a lot of my own person and people I know in this character.
Is this a standalone or going to be a series? I am begging for another book!!

I received this story as an ARC in exchange for an honest review.
I have to start by congratulating the author on fantastic world-building. The writing was very descriptive without feeling convoluted. It was easy to get lost in the world following Xelle's adventures. One of my favourite parts of this world was diversity. I liked that there were various gender identities represented. I love when authors remove the very real and current types of bigotry (real-world racism, homophobia, etc.) from their fantasy world sometimes!
Xelle was a unique main character. She came across as very relatable and easy to get attached to. Her characterization felt very refreshing! As someone who struggles with my own anxiety, seeing myself represented in a story made me feel seen and validated in a weird way. I also adored the way Xelle's sexuality was addressed. It felt grounded in the reality of how attraction works for many people on an individual level. There were moments I felt a little confused at the beginning of the story but it was very easy to get sucked in the story. I cannot wait to read more from E. D. E. Bell

I really enjoyed Night Ivy. Although I felt the book took a couple of chapters to find its footing, once it did I couldn't stop reading.
It reminds me of Becky Chambers's A Psalm of the Wild-Built in a lot of ways--a focus on character relationships and a quiet, but sometimes intense, approach to storytelling and description. One of the other reviews here compares it to Nghi Vo's Singing Hills cycle, which I think is on point for its interest in narrative and storytelling. Sometimes it reminds me of Studio Ghibli films as well, with lots of lush, loving description of places I totally want to visit, and a deft eye for "ma" (negative space) as well as for action and character development.
Finally, as a person in middle age as well as someone who suffers from anxiety (social anxiety sufferer in particular), I really appreciated Xelle as a character. It was refreshing to see someone who struggles with people in similar ways to me, and whose journey through the world looked a little more like mine than your stereotypical (teenage, male, able-bodied, neurotypical) fantasy protagonist.
I did feel that there were a few loose ends by the end of the book, but since it's the first in a series that's to be expected. And some of those loose ends felt like they were deliberate, as well, a choice made by the author to create a world that's messy and imperfect rather than one where everything is resolved in the space of a few hundred pages.
The bottom line is that if you're looking for fantasy about neurodiverse characters--or just great fantasy in a unique setting, period--you'll definitely want to check out Night Ivy.
Readers who liked this book also liked:
Lori Perkins, Christopher Golden, Jessica Pipp, Michele Hornish, David Freed, Ed Stein, Riki Wilchins
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