48 pages • 1 hour read
Olivie BlakeA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Masters of Death employs mythological and cultural backgrounds from across the world, creating a foundation of inclusivity and exploration. The text highlights characters such as Gabriel, Raphael, God, and Lucifer from Abrahamic religions while incorporating characters such as Volos and Isis from Slavic and Ancient Egyptian religions, respectively, presenting a thorough tapestry of the world’s religious and cultural backgrounds. Through these characters, the text provides a sense of commonality and grounding within a complex world, suggesting that fears of mortality are universal, transcending culture and religion.
Blake also highlights a wide worldview of creatures, particularly through Viola’s vampirism. Although Viola is technically a vampire, she describes herself as an aswang—a shapeshifter vampire from Filipino folklore. According to Filipino folklore, aswangs feed on unborn babies, which is why Viola feels uncomfortable around the pregnant woman at the open house. The incorporation of such folklore displays an appreciation for varying approaches to death and the afterlife, which are often explored through world folklores, myths, and legends. Masters of Death demonstrates the cultural universality in humanity’s fascination with mortality and immortality through legends that attempt to comprehend and explain what happens after death. Rather than making this concept scary, the text uses dark humor, authority, and cultural knowledge to highlight the unknown aspects of the afterlife.
Blake uses the genre of urban fantasy to blend elements of comedy and horror, highlighting the complex themes of the afterlife. Urban fantasy is a subgenre of fantasy, known for its incorporation of supernatural elements into a contemporary setting. Rather than focusing on world building, which is a common element of fantasy novels, urban fantasy expounds on its themes within modern, familiar settings. By mixing mortal and immortal characters, the text explores the contrast of the mundane with the supernatural—a key element of urban fantasy. Additionally, using multiple folklores in an overlapping tapestry of mythological characters—the aswang, water spirits, angels, demons, and reapers—creates an ensemble that lends itself to dark comedy. This juxtaposition of dark comedy with horror is also key to urban fantasy, which explores human universals like death through a lens of fantasy alongside the mundane. However, the text subverts the common trope in urban fantasy surrounding solely women protagonists and romances between people of the same gender, instead highlighting gay characters in a primary romance between Fox and Brandt. Urban fantasy is furthered through Fox’s nuanced character: Although he is the protagonist, he is a morally gray character. Rather than creating a stark difference between good and evil, the text shows the complexities of morality through the characters’ internal struggles and the conflicting feelings that stem from each side.
By Olivie Blake
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