The Dragon Lord’s Daughters by Bertrice Small

I finished one series about dragons, only to start a collection of novellas about the three daughters of a man known as the Dragon Lord. I went to my spreadsheet of books for this one, as I was looking for an easy to read standalone novel that I could use to wind down at the end of the day. Bertrice Small always gives me exactly what I need.

This book is split into three parts, one tale for each of the three daughters of Merin Pendragon, a descendant of King Arthur. Averil, his eldest, was born of his greatest love, his concubine Gorawen. Although she is not legitimate, Averil is beautiful and loved by her father, so unlike most girls born out of wedlock, she can expect to make a good marriage. Before her parents can even consider who would make her a good husband, she finds herself kidnapped.

Merin’s second daughter, Maia, is his only legitimate one, as she is the daughter of his wife, Argel. Being beautiful, legitimate, and also very much loved, her chances of making an excellent marriage are even greater than that of her elder sister. She does indeed find herself a wonderful and very acceptable suitor, but she must prove she is worthy of him.

Junia, the youngest, is the daughter of Merin’s other concubine, Ysbail. She possesses great beauty like her sisters and the love of her father. However, unlike her sisters, Junia’s first love ends in tragedy and she swears she will never love again. And after what happened, I do not blame her. 

I don’t want to say anything negative about this book, because it served the exact purpose I was looking for, but I have some thoughts. It was easy to read, it was straightforward. There wasn’t an overly complicated plot, I didn’t have to take notes or go back and reread something to understand what was going on. These are things I wanted, and I honestly really enjoyed the first two parts. But the third part, Junia’s tale, just did not fit. The level of violence and cruelty in her tale was misplaced, it really threw me off. Averil and Maia face challenges, but Junia faces pain, terror, and loss, in more ways than one. Her tale is what makes me not really want to consider it a book I would read again in the future. At least I have dozens of other Bertrice Small novels I can turn to.

Iron Flame by Rebecca Yarros

It’s really nice to be able to read a sequel immediately after finishing its predecessor, especially for a series that you just started but one that others have been waiting months to get their hands on. It ends on a bittersweet note for me, however, as there will be another book following this one that I will have to wait a long time for. And the cliffhanger for Iron Flame was one that had me much more anxious to get to the next part of the story than the surprise I read at the end of Fourth Wing. Read no further unless you don’t mind spoilers.

I was glad that the story picked up right where it left off, with us learning how Brennan faked his death and joined the rebels. After I got over that unexpected twist, I was wondering how the rest of the story was going to go. It didn’t seem like going back to Basgiath was an option after what happened during the War Games. Violet and her squad were led into a trap by Colonel Aetos, a trap in which he expected all of them to die. After recovering for several days in rebel territory I couldn’t see how they would explain where they had been and why they had been gone for so long. Xaden and some of the other rebels came up with a plan, and it was actually pretty clever. It’s a good thing that the battle tactics were well written and made sense, because the ongoing fight between Xaden and Violet hardly does. 

Here is where I go on a rant, I apologize in advance but I just need to say my piece. It’s understandable that Violet is mad at Xaden for keeping a few secrets, particularly the ones regarding their relationship, but she can’t expect him to tell her everything when he is protecting so many people with the very secrets she insists he reveal. She then chose to act the hypocrite when she started keeping secrets of her own, ones that she chose to not reveal to Xaden out of both secrecy and spite. She insisted on complete honesty between the two of them in order for her to consider removing the romantic hold she placed on their relationship, yet she herself becomes dishonest towards him. And the dialogue between the two of them gets increasingly frustrating the longer the fight drags on, to the point that I didn’t even care that it put their relationship on hold, I just wanted it to make a bit of sense. I’m pretty sure that at one point Violet herself questioned what they were fighting about, and if that’s not saying something about the irrationality of it all I can’t think of anything else that could make it clearer. They do stop fighting at some point and the plot gets going. 

The last eight pages were where a bomb got dropped on us. A lot of stuff happened suddenly and all at once. Even though this series has been heavy on the death, killing established characters maliciously, I was still holding out for the good guys to overcome. I don’t know if that is going to happen now. There is going to have to be another huge twist or some kind of revelation in the next book for a certain character to survive what happened to them during the battle between riders and venin. I am kind of predicting an unhappy ending.

Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros

This book really helped with the Crescent City hangover I was going through. I can’t believe I held out for so long when it came to this series as it was honestly becoming a hassle trying to avoid spoilers online. But it fit in with this month’s theme, fantasy, and now I can peruse the internet without fear or anxiety of having the plot ruined! I say that because I immediately started on the sequel hours after finishing Fourth Wing, because it ends on a really heartwarming cliffhanger and I had to know what happened. But you will have to wait until Thursday next week for that review, I am not that quick when it comes to writing my thoughts down.

Fourth Wing takes place in a fantasy world of two kingdoms in which dragons and gryphons exist, along with magic. The territories of Navarre and Poromiel have been at war for four hundred years and it seems like there will never be an end to it. Even the trade agreement put into place two hundred years ago, in which goods are exchanged four times a year, doesn’t stop the two kingdoms from constantly fighting with each other. We follow our main character, Violet, a girl born with a weak body due to an illness her mother had while she was pregnant. She had been training her entire life to work in the library as a scribe due to her physical limitations, but after the death of her scribe father, her General mother forces her to join the riders quadrant to become a warrior. Either the General has a lot of pride or she just doesn’t even like her daughter at all, because she has to know that Violet’s chances of surviving the brutal training that comes with being a cadet of the riders quadrant are slim. 

That’s the plot without giving too much away. Still, I do want to talk about some of the characters. Dain, Violet’s friend since childhood, seems nice at first in his desire to keep her alive and safe, but he soon starts to rub me the wrong way with his hovering, overprotectiveness, and lack of faith in her. He constantly tells her what she isn’t and what she cannot do, and I know I would have lost my patience with him long before she did. Contrary to Dain, Mira, Violet’s older sister, goes about trying to protect her in the correct way, by giving her as many tips as she can in the short period of time she has with her before she enters the quadrant. Mira knows that Violet was better suited to be a scribe, not just because of her physical limitations, but because of her brilliant mind. This doesn’t stop her from being the good kind of protective, by providing Violet with an armored corset that she tells her to wear at all times, and a book from their older brother, which they are not supposed to have but is full of valuable information for survival. There are a lot of other characters in the book, but I warn you, try get too attached to anyone, as there is a lot of death.

I also wanted to talk a little bit about my favorite theme that is an essential part of the story, and that is sexuality. Because the riders quadrant is the most dangerous, a place where you can literally die any day, the cadets live as though every day could be their last. That translates to a lot of sex. Violet, being weak, has to be on guard at all times, so she refrains from getting physical with anyone because being killed before, during, or after sex is a possibility. This leaves her feeling lonely and frustrated, and sometimes the butt of jokes with her few friends. Finding someone to trust enough to have a physical relationship also poses a problem for Violet, as relationships are discouraged. The training in the riders quadrant is so rigorous, and the competition between cadets is so great, that death from training or assassination is something that occurs nearly every day. No one wants to date someone only to see them die during a training exercise or watch them get stabbed by a fellow cadet, so everyone tries to leave emotions out of their physical encounters and this leaves Violet without any options. Besides all that drama, I do love the representation of heterosexual and homosexual characters. 

I am excited to see where this story goes. I imagine that there will be one or two additional books in the future. And as long as the second book is as good as the first I think this is a series I will anticipate in seeing the conclusion of the tale.

Crescent City: House of Flame and Shadow by Sarah J. Maas

I am going to start off yet again stating that this post is full of spoilers, much more so than my last post. I would suggest that unless you have finished HOFAS or you just don’t care about spoilers, do not read any further than this paragraph. 

I was very pleasantly surprised. This book does a really good job of cleaning up a lot of loose ends. It doesn’t end on a cliffhanger, but I was left with a few questions, nothing that will keep me up at night, but it gives me hope that there will be a fourth book in the future. And seeing that each of the books have been titled after three of the four houses, I think it would be safe to assume that the fourth book would potentially be titled House of Many Waters. I don’t want to get into the plot, because it is a lot, but every major cliffhanger we were left with at the end of HOSAB is resolved. We also got the crossover we were waiting for, and I really liked that we not only got to see some of the ACOTAR characters in the very beginning of the book but at the end too. A lot of the evil, cruel, and misogynistic characters are killed and there is a happy ending for almost all of the protagonists. In this book, there is a lot of back and forth with the first person point of view which goes constantly back and forth between Bryce, Hunt, Ruhn, Tharion, Ithan, and Lidia. I feel like there might even have been a few other first person point of views that I am missing, I think Hypaxia might be one of them. I was hearing that a lot of people didn’t like that the point of view changed so often but I did not mind it. All the main characters were split up for a lot of the book. The way the story flows makes it so that the reader is seeing things as they happen in the present time, so even though Bryce is in Prythian, Hunt is in the dungeons with Ruhn and Baxian, and Declan and Flynn are doing reconnaissance, sometimes with Ithan and Tharion, you get to see what everyone is doing at the same time on the same day. I feel like this worked well, even if you were dying to know what happened to someone but you had to read from the point of view of a few characters before you got back to the story line you were most interested in.

That is about as much as I will say about the plot overall. Now, I just want to get my questions out there.

Is Sathia in some kind of trouble? She went to the Meat Market to try and see if she could free her friend from the Viper Queen. And Tharion, on his way there to find her, is confronted by Ariadne, who was kind of working for the Viper Queen as a fighter, but left her service towards the end of the book. Speaking of which, is she even still a slave?

Who killed the seventh Asteri, Octartis? Sirius was killed, or removed from the world, a long time ago by one of the Princes of Hel. Bryce killed Polaris on the battlefield by using the blades and her power to open the portal to nowhere. Immediately after that she and Hunt teleported to the first light tubes where they were met with Rigelus, soon after joined by Eosphoros, Hesperus, and Austrus. Bryce sends them into a second portal. Both Ruhn and Bryce mention that they felt time slow down in between the death of Polaris and the other four Asteri, which is an indicator that an Asteri had been killed. Did I miss something? I swear no one talks about it in the aftermath. I also couldn’t find an answer online. 

The tattoo on Bryce’s back is in the same language as the symbols used in the Book of Breathings, as stated by Amren in the beginning of the book. Are these the same symbols that Ithan sees on the metal bowl that the statue is holding when he and Hypaxia go to see the Under King in the Bone Quarter? He says the symbols look familiar but he can’t place them. If he has seen Bryce’s tattoo, maybe that is why they seem familiar. Or, it could be that Ithan was a history major and maybe he saw something similar in a book while he was in school. And following that, are the symbols Wyrd marks? As in the symbols that are prevalent in the Throne of Glass series? 

Finally, why did that one language, the old Fae language, stop being spoken in Prythian over 15,000 years ago? Did it just fall out of style? I feel like it might have something to do with the Asteri. Maybe they didn’t want the Fae of Prythian and the Fae of Midgard to be able to communicate with each if they ever came into contact. Maybe it was like their kill switch, an insurance policy created on the very slim chance that the portal between worlds would open and the two groups could somehow figure out that the Dagdan and the Asteri were the same beings. 

I know that I probably won’t get answers to these questions for a long time, but I can wait patiently. I believe that the next book SJM is writing is another installment in the ACOTAR series and that is probably a few years away from being published. And while I think that there will be mentions of what happened in HOFAS in the next installment of ACOTAR, I think it will primarily focus on the characters in that universe. I personally am hoping for an Azriel focused story, he is my favorite, and I am really hoping that he ends up with Gwyn, or, in a surprise twist, Eris.

Crescent City: House of Sky and Breath by Sarah J. Maas

With HOFAS due to arrive at my house on February 2nd I did it again and read another book consisting of over 700 pages in less than 48 hours. I could not put House of Sky and Breath down, and it wasn’t because I was in a rush to read the newly released third book of the series. We finally got answers to the many questions that we were left with at the end of HOEAB. On top of that, new mysteries were placed before us in this second Crescent City novel, and I found myself surprised more than once with things I wasn’t even considering and did not see coming. I was happy that there wasn’t an overload of new information right at the start which seemed to overwhelm me and the majority of everyone else who has read the first book. However, we were given just as much new information to mull over and try to sort through. I did have to add to my pages of notes that I took during the first book because I knew that there was no way I was going to remember everything. I also knew that even the smallest thing could come up big in the future. Even though I know I will be re-reading these books at some point in the future, the notes are good to have on hand.

I will preface this next paragraph by saying there are minor spoilers ahead, but if you are here reading this it is likely that you have already finished reading HOEAB and hopefully HOSAB. I am not going to give an overview of the book, it would be impossible, I am just going to express some of my overall feelings. You may now continue if you wish, you have been warned. 

At the end of HOEAB Bryce and Hunt were in her apartment trying to wind down after saving the city from Hel’s demons. Before they could seal the deal, they were both interrupted by phone calls, Bryce getting one from her mother and Hunt getting one from Isaiah. They both end up going to help sort out all the chaos that occurs after the battle which also included the deaths of two very important leaders. We find out in HOSAB that afterwards, instead of going home and finishing what they started, Bryce told Hunt that she wanted to take things slow, and get to know each other better. Several months have passed and they have been working on their friendship, and in terms of their physical relationship it seems like at most they have been holding hands and doing cheek and forehead kisses. Then we learn that she suggested a date to consummate their relationship, and that it is still months away. I was so disappointed when I read this, I believe I actually let out a drawn out, “What?” in frustration. I tried to make peace with myself after coming to realize that it was going to be a long time before any action happened. Luckily, my hope of Bryce changing the terms came true and we ended up not having to wait too long for something to happen, if you count a quarter of the entire book as not being too long. But the wait is worth it, because this book gets spicy. For two people that were incredibly attracted to each other, they have an amazing amount of self control. I feel like the wait we had to go through as readers was as frustrating as it was for these imaginary characters in their situation. 

Obviously, there is way more to this book than just the spice. We get to learn more about Hunt’s friend, Tharion, the mer man. He actually has kind of a tragic backstory and you end up feeling really bad for the guy. Ithan gets a bigger role in this story, which I ended up loving. He’s a really selfless, kind guy, he just believed in the lies that were spread because no one was able to present him with the truth until recently, and I am glad he and Bryce were able to mend their friendship. The story ends really tragically though, with some of the characters being captured and the core gang getting split up. But it is the last chapter in the book, the chapter with the biggest and most exciting cliffhanger I have ever read, that is probably the greatest thing to ever happen in fantasy novel history. I was more excited about getting to read HOFAS than I was when I got to read Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows after that two year wait. I will just say that it has something to do with my favorite SJM series. After finishing this book, I think that this is now my second favorite series in the SJM universe. And I think after I have finished the next book in a few days I will be solid with my resolve in this decision.