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A review by the_cover_contessa
Heir of Storms by Lauryn Hamilton Murray
challenging
dark
emotional
mysterious
tense
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? It's complicated
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
- Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
3.0
Thank you to Macmillan Children's Publishing Group | Roaring Brook Press and NetGalley for providing me with a copy of this title to read and give my honest review. The opinions expressed here are my own.
Blaze is a rain singer who almost drowned the world with her birth. She has hidden away from the world her entire 17 years. When an invitation comes to compete for a future as a ruler, she and her brother join the games. Blaze is forced to explore her untapped power. But there are threats to the palace and Blaze must forge her own path to write a new story for herself.
I must first comment on the beautiful cover of this book. I'm admitting to judging a book by it's cover. This one drew me right in and I don't think I even read the blurb before I requested it. But then I read the blurb and it sounded intriguing. While the blurb talks about The Red Queen and Shadow and Bone, it fails to mention The Hunger Games or even Avatar. While it's not quite the same, the story definitely has these vibes with the way the potential rulers go through challenges, challenge each other, and use elements as their power. However, this one is unique: people taking their powers from the elements of fire, water, wind, and earth. While I know it's been done before, the author really did give this story it's own unique twists and turns. And there is an added elements of being all seeing and knowing the future added in.
I enjoyed Blaze. She was, for me, a quite typical YA fantasy heroine. One who doesn't really know what power she holds until she begins to explore it and see what she can really do. I liked how she learned to control her water wielding. The emotion attached to her being able to rein in her power was an interesting twist. She is not fearless at all, but definitely becomes determined to prove herself. What I didn't love was not having the other characters fleshed out. The author just barely skimmed the surface with making us understand them. I feel like the first person point of view truly limited the character development.
The romance didn't hit me well. I just didn't feel the chemistry to author was trying to create with the Crown Prince. It seemed too superficial. Though, when I think about what was revealed later, this makes a bit of sense. But still, Blaze definitely fell into things a bit harder than I would have thought given the limited interactions with the Crown Prince before she was pining for him. The addition of a bit of a love triangle definitely made things more interesting. The romance scene with said third party was probably the best part of the romance in the book. I will say the romance is not the crux of the story. But if you're going to introduce this trope, I need it to work well and it just didn't really do that for me. I honestly think it could have been left out and just been a fantasy and left at that.
As for the pacing, it was all over the place. Some scenes were super fast and I had to actually back track to make sure I understood what was happening. But other parts of the book were so slow, I found myself skimming at times to just get to the next chapter. The final chapters of the book did explode, though, and I found my rating increase just because of how they were structured and where they took the story. There were some unexpected twists thrown in, which definitely helped keep me in the story.
Is the story totally unique? No, not at all. I definitely saw elements from pretty much every YA fantasy I have read. But the author does do a good job with keeping the reader engaged. I have seen some talk of racism and slavery and it not being handled well. I did not find this to be the case, personally but I can see where others may have felt this way. The politics of the story definitely lend themselves to this fact.
Overall, this one was just ok for me, nothing new and exciting and nothing that kept me wanting to truly turn the pages. I'm not sure if I will continue on with this series. I wanted to be more surprised by what was happening because that is exciting to me, but that just didn't happen. I wanted to love it but the plot was predictable and the creativity was lacking.
Blaze is a rain singer who almost drowned the world with her birth. She has hidden away from the world her entire 17 years. When an invitation comes to compete for a future as a ruler, she and her brother join the games. Blaze is forced to explore her untapped power. But there are threats to the palace and Blaze must forge her own path to write a new story for herself.
I must first comment on the beautiful cover of this book. I'm admitting to judging a book by it's cover. This one drew me right in and I don't think I even read the blurb before I requested it. But then I read the blurb and it sounded intriguing. While the blurb talks about The Red Queen and Shadow and Bone, it fails to mention The Hunger Games or even Avatar. While it's not quite the same, the story definitely has these vibes with the way the potential rulers go through challenges, challenge each other, and use elements as their power. However, this one is unique: people taking their powers from the elements of fire, water, wind, and earth. While I know it's been done before, the author really did give this story it's own unique twists and turns. And there is an added elements of being all seeing and knowing the future added in.
I enjoyed Blaze. She was, for me, a quite typical YA fantasy heroine. One who doesn't really know what power she holds until she begins to explore it and see what she can really do. I liked how she learned to control her water wielding. The emotion attached to her being able to rein in her power was an interesting twist. She is not fearless at all, but definitely becomes determined to prove herself. What I didn't love was not having the other characters fleshed out. The author just barely skimmed the surface with making us understand them. I feel like the first person point of view truly limited the character development.
The romance didn't hit me well. I just didn't feel the chemistry to author was trying to create with the Crown Prince. It seemed too superficial. Though, when I think about what was revealed later, this makes a bit of sense. But still, Blaze definitely fell into things a bit harder than I would have thought given the limited interactions with the Crown Prince before she was pining for him. The addition of a bit of a love triangle definitely made things more interesting. The romance scene with said third party was probably the best part of the romance in the book. I will say the romance is not the crux of the story. But if you're going to introduce this trope, I need it to work well and it just didn't really do that for me. I honestly think it could have been left out and just been a fantasy and left at that.
As for the pacing, it was all over the place. Some scenes were super fast and I had to actually back track to make sure I understood what was happening. But other parts of the book were so slow, I found myself skimming at times to just get to the next chapter. The final chapters of the book did explode, though, and I found my rating increase just because of how they were structured and where they took the story. There were some unexpected twists thrown in, which definitely helped keep me in the story.
Is the story totally unique? No, not at all. I definitely saw elements from pretty much every YA fantasy I have read. But the author does do a good job with keeping the reader engaged. I have seen some talk of racism and slavery and it not being handled well. I did not find this to be the case, personally but I can see where others may have felt this way. The politics of the story definitely lend themselves to this fact.
Overall, this one was just ok for me, nothing new and exciting and nothing that kept me wanting to truly turn the pages. I'm not sure if I will continue on with this series. I wanted to be more surprised by what was happening because that is exciting to me, but that just didn't happen. I wanted to love it but the plot was predictable and the creativity was lacking.