The Knight and the Moth Is a Gorgeously Imagined Gothic Fantasy Romance

Gothic fantasy may seem as though it’s more suited for a Fall release than the early days of summer. But Rachel Gillig’s latest novel, The Knight and the Moth, is the sort of haunting tale that unspools like gossamer, limned and glimmering in a way that feels much more fitting for slowly lengthening evenings and warm nights. Many readers will likely find their way into this story thanks to the book’s stunningly beautiful cover, which (thankfully) accurately conveys the vibes within its pages.
The first installment in Gillig’s new Stonewater Kingdom series, The Knight and the Moth is delicate and delicious in every way, boasting a fascinating premise, a uniquely dark Gothic atmosphere, and the sort of worldbuilding that’s bursting with vivid imagery and shockingly lived-in detail. Set in a medieval-esque world where magic is real, gargoyles are sentient, and isolated hamlets are held together almost solely through the power of belief, its tone is almost painfully haunting, and its premise is uniquely fresh. Gilling’s atmospheric prose has never been better, and while some of the narrative themes will be familiar to those who read her Shepherd King duology, they’re more sharply realized and executed here.
The story follows Six, one of the nameless Diviners of Aisling Cathedral, former foundlings whose lives are dedicated to scrying the future in the church’s magical spring. This process isn’t nearly as quaint or pleasant as it sounds; however, these young women are forced to drown over and over again in order to receive messages from the six gods known as the Omens. The Diviners constantly wear face coverings, have sacrificed their former identities to serve their gods, and are not permitted to leave the cathedral grounds. Six and her cohort of sisters are nearing the end of their proscribed decade of service, and are beginning to look forward to what might come next for them, from exploring the kingdom they’ve never seen to falling in love.
But when the newly crowned king of Traum, Benedict Castor III, comes to have his fortune divined, Six sees dark signs in his future and finds herself unexpectedly drawn to one of his knights, a rude nonbeliever named Roderick “Rory” Myndacious who mocks her faith and traditions. Things take a decidedly dark(er) turn when her sister Diviners begin to vanish one by one—Six vows to discover what has happened to them, but to do that, she’ll need some help from the king—and from his heretic knight. What follows is a sprawling adventure through a meticulously imagined and lore-rich world, as Six searches for answers that may well change everything she was taught to believe about herself and the gods themselves.