The Last Druid

In The Last Druid, we follow Ganna, a teenage survivor of a Roman massacre, as she stumbles out of annihilation with vengeance in her mouth and ash in her lungs. What begins as a survival story quickly widens into something more layered: a journey through grief, memory, druidic inheritance, and the question of whether a shattered self can become a vessel for wisdom rather than only for revenge. Author Ivy Gilbert gives the novel a stark opening and then steadily deepens it, carrying Ganna from raw trauma into a larger struggle over what it means to preserve a people’s spirit when their world has been burned almost to nothing.

I found the book’s emotional temperature very compelling. It doesn’t ease the reader in; it throws readers into ruin. I admired that severity. Ganna’s fury is not ornamental. It has weight, and Gilbert lets that weight remain ugly, exhausting, and at times nearly feral. I especially liked the evolving dynamic between Ganna and Fionn, because their conversations keep the novel from becoming a simple revenge march. He presses against her rage without cheapening it, and the book is strongest when it lets wisdom arrive as resistance rather than comfort.

This is a rich Celtic historical fiction novel and a female-led epic, carried by Ganna’s ferocious will and by a world that feels steeped in ancestral memory, conquest, and myth. Beneath the historical-fantasy scaffolding, the novel is trying to write about trauma not as a single wound but as an organizing force in consciousness. A late revelation recasts much of what came before, and while that move is daring enough to divide readers, I thought it gave the story a haunted coherence. The prose can be emphatic, but it also has flashes of real vividness: fire, bark, breath, blood, and wind recur until the whole book feels hypnotic rather than merely descriptive. I came away feeling that the novel’s strongest magic is not its mysticism but its insistence that survival itself is strange, sacred labor.

I’d recommend The Last Druid to readers of historical fantasy, mythic fantasy, Celtic fantasy, trauma fiction, and female-driven coming-of-age stories, especially readers who want grief and spiritual inheritance to matter as much as plot. Fans of Madeline Miller may recognize a similar seriousness about myth, memory, and interior transformation, though Gilbert’s book is rougher-edged and more flame-scored. This is a fervent novel that turns survival into its own kind of sorcery.

Pages: 385 | ASIN : B0GNBYQJMG

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The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.

Posted on April 13, 2026, in Book Reviews, Five Stars and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.

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