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adventurous
medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven:
Plot
Strong character development:
Complicated
Loveable characters:
Complicated
Diverse cast of characters:
Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus:
No
Thanks to Ballantine Books (Random House) and NetGalley for the e-ARC! Below is my honest review. This book was published January 23rd - I recommend checking it out!
What an amazing take on fae and fae lands! The worldbuilding is astonishing. It’s simple in that it’s not cumbersome to explain or set up, yet the world has so much depth and intrigue. It’s one of the best fantasy worlds I’ve read in awhile. The description of the magic system is, again, not burdensome, and we only get the details of how it works: drum beats (amazing), divination as a practiced skill, and links to nature and creatures. The world described isn’t a nice place: poverty, endless war, and corrupt powers plague the elven lands; the fae lands - though resources are abundant and shared equitably - are hostile, close-minded, and militaristic. The war is a well-developed backdrop for the plot, and this is definitely a plot-driven book, though I would have liked more depth to the characters.
I felt like the only character I could really “see” was Lettle, who is determined to get home, but I couldn’t understand why or what connections she really has to home. Yeeran and Rayan’s motivations were rather vague to me too. I think another chapter or two in the beginning of the book to give something to root the characters’ motivations in would have helped me understand everyone more. I don’t necessarily feel like these characters are flat, I just feel like we weren’t shown as deep into them as we could have been, and the potential was there. I also think the romances fell a short for me because of this. Read this book for the world and plot, with the romances as a little side thing. I hope we’ll get to see the characters a little deeper in a sequel since the world and setting is already described.