Wednesday, November 19, 2025

#Review - Princess of Blood by Sarah Hawley #Fantasy #Romance

Series:
 
The Shards of Magic (#2)
Format: 512 pages, Hardcover
Release Date: September 30, 2025
Publisher: Ace
Source: Publisher
Genre: Fantasy / Romance

Once a servant, now a princess, a young woman thrust into power challenges everything about the underground Fae realm in the spellbinding sequel to Sarah Hawley’s USA Today bestseller Servant of Earth.

Kenna Heron is still reeling from her lover’s betrayal and the threat of an impending civil war. With only a sentient dagger and her two closest—and most powerless—friends by her side, she must navigate the treacherous politics of Mistei while coming to terms with her new identity as not just Fae, but princess of the reborn Blood House.

With the corrupt king dead at last, three candidates are vying for the crown: a princess who claims the throne as her birthright and two rebel princes, both of whom are courting Kenna’s support to break the stalemate between them. Old loyalties fray as new, volatile alliances form, and Kenna finds herself caught in a web of violence and deceit—and swept up in a forbidden romance as passionate as it is dangerous.

Kenna has the power to shape Mistei’s future… but someone’s willing to kill to make sure she never gets the chance.


Princess of Blood is the second installment in author Sarah Hawley's The Shards of Magic series. This book is set in an underground faerie kingdom of Mistei, where there are six different houses for each branch of magic and a clear hierarchy that the heroine explores throughout the novel. With her new Fae powers and backed only by her two closest friends, the heroine must face off against her former lover turned betrayer and all those vying for the crown. The heroine is in her early twenties and goes through a series of trials in the vein of The Hunger Games and is embroiled in complicated, yet alluring romantic relationships with noble fae, like in The Cruel Prince.

If the debut introduced us to a brutal world of immortal trials and hidden magics, this one dives headfirst into the political meat grinder, where alliances shatter like glass and every shadow hides a dagger. At its core, Princess of Blood follows Kenna Heron, the once-human servant who clawed her way to Fae immortality and now stands as the newly minted Princess of the long-extinct Blood House. Armed with a sentient, blood-hungry dagger named Caedo, and a raw, untested affinity for blood magic, Kenna must rebuild her shattered house from the ground up while the power vacuum left by the tyrant's death threatens to drown Mistei in civil war. 

Three ambitious candidates—each from a rival House—vie for the throne under a fragile 30-day peace accord, promising reforms for the oppressed underfae and human servants alike. But in a realm where houses like Void, Fire, Illusion, Light, and Earth wield magics as diverse as shadow manipulation and elemental fury, trust is a luxury Kenna can't afford. With only a handful of wary allies (including her former mistress and a few unexpected outcasts), she navigates assassination plots, forbidden unions, and the ghosts of betrayals past, all while grappling with her vote's potential to crown a savior—or a new monster. 

The narrative structure smartly alternates between tense political maneuvering and intimate moments of strategy and survival, building to a cliffhanger that's as shocking as it is inevitable—though, fair warning, if you're prone to hurling books across the room in frustration, this ending might test your throwing arm. Kenna is the beating (or bleeding) heart of the story—a vengeful anti-heroine who's equal parts resilient badass and vulnerable novice. Her arc from wide-eyed servant to pragmatic princess is compelling, marked by moments of "voluntary incompetence" in which she second-guesses her instincts, frustrating but ultimately humanizing her. 

The supporting cast shines too, from the morally gray rebels harboring dark secrets to the sadistic power couples scheming in gilded halls. Standouts include the enigmatic Kallen of Void House, whose evolution from shadowy antagonist to reluctant mentor (and more) adds layers of delicious tension—his backstory revelations are among the book's most surprising twists. In contrast, characters like the arrogant Fire Prince feel deliberately off-putting, their condescension highlighting Kenna's journey toward self-sufficiency.

Mistei's underground sprawl remains one of the series' crown jewels— a labyrinthine city of crystalline caverns, blood-soaked arenas, and house-specific magics that feel alive and oppressive. Hawley expands on the lore masterfully, delving into outlawed inter-house unions, the shards of ancient gods, and the hierarchies that trap humans and underfae in servitude, all while keeping the prose vivid and immersive.



1

The Blood Tree rose before me, tall and impossibly ancient. Its branches had been bare the last time I'd been in the vast stone chamber leading to Blood House-during the immortality trials, when the tree had shown me a lifetime of my sins-but now they were covered with crimson leaves. The stone tiles beneath my feet felt alive. Power thrummed through the chamber, an invisible current that brushed against a strange new inner sense.

I shivered at the sensation, just one sign of the tremendous and frightening change I'd undergone.

I wasn't human any longer.

I was a faerie-and the new leader of Blood House.

Welcome, Princess Kenna, a voice whispered inside my head. Liquid, female, throbbing like a pulse.

"How do we get inside?" These words were spoken out loud, and I turned my head to look at the speaker. Lara, my former mistress and the excommunicated heir to Earth House, looked as exhausted as she sounded. Like me, she had one arm around a drooping, distant-eyed woman with a shaved head and skin newly lined with scars: Anya Hayes, my best friend from the human world, who I'd thought dead until a few hours ago. She'd been unresponsive but capable of walking when we'd left the corpse-filled throne room, but she'd sagged more with every step. Now she seemed barely conscious.

My chest hurt unbearably as I looked at them. The three of us had survived months of danger and a night of carnage, but at what cost? Lara had been stripped of her magic, her family, and her home; Anya had been tortured in unimaginable ways.

"I'm not sure yet," I told Lara. "I need to figure out what the trap is."

All six Fae houses in the underground city of Mistei had dangerous traps at their entrances. They were tests only house faeries could pass, while intruders were killed gruesomely. Fire House burned unwelcome visitors with a curtain of flame, Earth House drowned them in a tunnel of water . . . What would the faeries of Blood House, who could magically manipulate bodies, have done to keep their borders safe?

They were my borders now, I supposed. The entirety of Blood House had been massacred five hundred years ago by King Osric, but now Osric was dead and the house had been resurrected in the form of . . . me. Just me. The six Sacred Shards that had brought magic to this world had gifted me with immortality and magic, and in exchange, I was supposed to "restore the balance." Whatever that meant. However one person could possibly do that.

My gaze ran over the entrance hall. The checkered black-and-white stone tiles were etched with the faces of monsters, and the gray walls were carved with beings of all types, too: Noble Fae, Underfae, and the dark, twisted Nasties that inhabited the lowest levels of Mistei. The Blood Tree dominated the chamber, reaching its gnarled limbs towards the distant ceiling, and beyond it was an enormous silver door covered in spikes.

I wondered if the Blood Shard was listening to my thoughts, since it had spoken in my head in that dark, welcoming voice. Any help? I thought towards the room in general. A hint on what the trap is?

The Shard didn't respond, but a coil of metal around my bicep did. Caedo-my bloodthirsty, shape-shifting dagger-was currently in the form of a spiraling armband, but it writhed like a serpent beneath my sleeve and sank sharp teeth into me.

I yelped in surprise, looking down at my arm. "Was that necessary?"

"What?" Lara asked, sounding confused.

Caedo nipped me again. You wanted a hint, the dagger said, its voice metallic and genderless in my head.

I eyed the projections on the door. If Caedo could drain a body in seconds, it made sense the house entrance could as well. Now I needed to figure out how to get it to not kill my friends.

"Can you hold Anya?" I asked Lara. My arm should have been aching from supporting her for this long, but I didn't feel the physical exhaustion I would have expected after the throne room fight and the long walk here. The Noble Fae were stronger and more resilient than humans, and I was one of them now.

I was immortal. It was unfathomable.

Lara nodded and looped her arm more firmly around Anya's waist. I let go, heart pinching with grief when Anya wouldn't meet my eyes. Did she still believe I wasn't real? She sagged into Lara's grip, shivering in her flimsy taupe garments.

She needed to get somewhere safe and warm. I would empty any number of veins to make that happen.

I walked around the tree, trailing a hand over its rough trunk. The leaves whispered and sighed. There was a pulse beneath the bark, one that sped until it mirrored mine. It was simultaneously welcoming and unsettling.

Ten more steps took me to the silver door, which was easily twice my height. The spikes covering it were as long as my forearm. Surely I wasn't supposed to impale myself every time I wanted inside.

Then I spotted a sculpted silver wolf's head on the right side of the door, nestled between several spikes at chest height. Its mouth was gaping, and when I bent to peer inside, I saw sharp teeth guarding a cylindrical silver rod.

I'm supposed to stick my hand in there? I asked Caedo silently.

Yes.

The nature of the trap came clear. If a house member grabbed the handle, the door would allow them inside. If an enemy tried, the wolf's teeth would slam together, and the door would consume them.

I hesitated before sliding my hand into the wolf's maw. Even knowing I was the new Princess of Blood, it was a relief when the door didn't immediately bite my hand off.

The metal rod warmed under my palm, and the door started vibrating. A rumbling sound filled the air, like the purring of some enormous cat. Without any effort on my part, the door began to open. I extricated my hand as it slid to the side on smooth tracks, revealing a blackened opening. The air emanating from within smelled dusty and stale, with a faint, aromatic spice beneath.

There were more spikes at the edge of the door, thick ones that had been slotted into the wall. If someone tried to run through the door while it was open, I imagined it would either slam shut, or the points would shape-shift to skewer the intruder.

Welcome home, the Shard whispered in my head.

My skin tingled, and something in my chest-not my heart, but something dark and burning that wrapped around it-pulsed with awareness. The magic that filled me recognized its echo everywhere. A new sense had come to life inside me, like hearing without ears or feeling without touch.

I turned to look at my friends. Lara's face was taut with apprehension, her brown eyes wide as they darted between me and the entrance. Anya still stared at nothing, lost inside her head.

"Blood Shard?" I whispered, not sure where it was or how I was supposed to address it. "Can I bring them with me?"

Claiming a new house member is no small matter, the Shard said in a dark purr. The tree trunk glowed red in one spot, and light began spreading across the bark in branching rivulets. You must be certain.

I faced the heart of that crimson shine. "I'm certain."

"Is the Shard . . . talking to you?" Lara asked softly. At my nod, she looked even more anxious.

"I want them to be members of Blood House," I told the Shard more firmly.

Lara made a pained expression, though she didn't protest. This couldn't be easy for her. Earlier this night she'd been the first daughter of Earth, heir to a house of water and greenery. Now she was a magicless outcast, forced to take shelter in a house of bloodshed and death.

The bark parted, revealing a chunk of garnet-colored crystal. It was hand-sized, curved on one side and jagged on the other. Awe filled me. The Shard had been formed during the destruction of another world beyond the stars, if King Osric was to be believed. It was the echo of a dead god, a vessel containing a fragment of magic that had been launched through the heavens to find a new home.

And it had chosen me to wield that magic.

Crimson light pulsed from the stone with each word. Then claim them.

"You approve?"

Nothing you do is for me to approve.

I wasn't sure I liked that. The Shard had been a god once-it was supposed to tell me what to do, how to be a princess.

I am not the one who came before, the Shard corrected. I am magic and memory. The Shards are woven into the fabric of this world-we do not rule.

I wrapped my arms around myself, rubbing up and down. The blue gauze of my half sleeves was wrinkled and dotted with flakes of dried blood. If it didn't rule . . . apparently I did. "How do I add them to the house?"

Set the intention in your mind. If you will it, I obey.

The Shard was the house, I realized. Or maybe we were all part of something larger, connected by the magic we shared. The tree, the house, the Shard, Caedo . . . and me.

I closed my eyes, breathing in and out slowly. I claim these two as members of Blood House, I thought.

It is done, the Shard whispered back.

It was that easy? I opened my eyes again, then beckoned Lara and Anya forward. "You're part of the house now."

Lara looked mistrustfully at the spiked door. "Are you sure? What if it stabs me?"

"It won't," I said, though my underarms were growing damp from nervous sweat. Putting my faith in the honesty of a sentient rock was difficult, but that sentient rock had also saved my life and given me magic tonight, so I tried to project confidence.

Lara's eyes were reddened from grief and exhaustion. Her green ball gown was torn and spattered with blood, and her wavy black hair was tangled. She swayed, then visibly pulled herself together, spine straightening as she looked at the entrance with determination. "So long as there's a bed in there, I don't care." She shifted Anya into my hold, then walked forward, took a deep breath, and stuck her hand out as if testing whether the door would slam shut on it. When it didn't, she let out an audible sigh of relief.

Anya looked nearly asleep on her feet. "Let's get you inside," I whispered.

The entrance loomed, silent and dark. Whatever lurked inside couldn't be worse than what filled the rest of Mistei, and there would at least be a bed to fall into. The thought of that made me want to cry.

So I urged Anya forward, Lara fell into step beside us, and we made our way into Blood House together.

The door slid shut behind us with an echoing clang. It was pitch black. Everything was still and silent except for a distant trickling sound.

"It's dark," Lara said unnecessarily.

"Maybe I can find a torch."

A vibration went through the floor. A faint red glow sparked in the distance, followed by another. A line of torches came alight one by one, outlining the borders of a vast room.

The house was waking up.

Once the torches on the ground floor were burning, more swelled to life a level above, their fire unusually red. The light sparked up and up, revealing six stories in all. Each level was lined with silver-railed walkways that overlooked the central space, with spiraling staircases anchoring the corners of the room. It had the same layout as Earth House's main hall, but the decor was startlingly different. Earth House was bright and verdant, with a floor of packed soil dotted with flowers and trees. Blood House was paved with gray marble that sparkled in the torchlight, and the garnet-hued walls were coated with silver filigree. The courtyard was anchored by a tiered fountain.

The liquid in the fountain was running red.

"Oh," Lara said, sounding dismayed.

"Oh," I echoed, feeling something more akin to awe.

A deep sense of comfort and safety filled the room-the same comfort I'd once felt as a servant in Earth House. The house's magic was wrapping us in a soothing blanket of welcome, letting us know we were home. The couches against the walls looked plush and inviting, as if they wanted us to rest. But the fountain was spilling blood, and the filigree wasn't the only shining ornamentation in the room-axes, swords, pikes, and spears rested in wooden racks and hung from brackets over the couches, as if the faeries of Blood House had never relaxed without a weapon close to hand.

A mix of softness and violence, beauty and death.

I brought Anya to a settee tucked beneath the curve of a staircase. It was upholstered in burgundy velvet, and a sword hung from the wall beside it. Dust puffed up as the couch took her weight, and she curled up on her side, closing her eyes.

Lara was exploring the room, trailing her fingers over the walls and furniture. She wrapped her hand around the haft of an axe, stared at it contemplatively for a few moments, then let go.

The weapons deserved investigation, but the liquid music of the fountain drew my attention. I crossed to it and sat on the dust-rimed edge, watching the fall of blood. The air was spiced with the coppery rich scent, and I didn't find it nearly as disgusting as I ought to. Whose blood is this? I asked Caedo silently.

The first princess began it with the blood of her enemies. You can add some from your next kill.

A cold shiver raced down my spine. I was a murderer now, and the dagger expected me to kill again. Worse, I expected myself to kill again. Illusion and Light House would be regrouping after the battle in the throne room. There would be violence as Mistei grappled with the question of who would rule next.

Ash-gray eyes filled my mind. Copper hair, a smile that flickered like flame, hands that had burned. A voice that had whispered promises in the dark and cruelties in the light.

I didn't want to think about Prince Drustan of Fire House, so I shoved the vision away.

The first princess had morbid taste, I told Caedo.

The dagger seemed amused as it pulsed against my skin. You will learn to appreciate blood. It slid down my arm like liquid, circling my wrist. I watched, fascinated, as it stretched narrow tendrils over my hand, mapping the spread of tendons before sending shoots over my fingers. It looked like a separate skeleton laid atop mine. Those metal bones were anchored in place with rings between each knuckle, and the tips sharpened into claws
.




Tuesday, November 18, 2025

#Review - Blind Date with a Werewolf by Patricia Briggs #Fantasy

Series:
 Alpha & Omega
Format: Hardcover, 288 pages
Release Date: 
October 21, 2025
Publisher: Ace
Source: Publisher
Genre: Urban Fantasy

When the deadly werewolf Asil is gifted five blind dates by some anonymous “friends,” his reclusive life will never be the same, in this enthralling novel in stories from the #1 New York Times bestselling author of the Mercy Thompson series.

Includes two all-new stories as well as three previously published stories.


Dear Asil:

We are worried about you. A werewolf alone is a sad thing, especially at Christmastime. So we have a challenge for you: five dates in three weeks. We have taken the work out of it and connected you with five people from online dating sites. You should also know that we have informed the whole pack and instigated a betting pool. Have fun!

Sincerely,

Your Concerned Friends


Blind Date with a Werewolf by Patricia Briggs comprises of five short stories and an epilogue in the Alpha and Omega universe. This novel includes five linked stories (two original and three previously published), each about one of the werewolf Asil's blind dates, which together tell an enthralling story with a satisfying conclusion. Asil Moreno, better known as Hussan the Moor, is one of the most dangerous werewolves in the world. 

*Slight spoilers* - Asil was introduced in previous Alpha & Omega stories because he joined Bran Cornick's pack. He came to the USA from Europe because, after losing his mate Sarai, he had lost his will to live. In fact, almost the only thing he now takes joy in is killing, which makes him better than Charles, who tends to have regrets. He came to Aspen Creek to ask Bran to kill him, but it was Anna, wife of Charles and the pack's Omega, who was able to help Asil from being killed. 

However, he's been in a funk lately, which is why he suddenly gets an email from a Concerned Friend saying they have set up 5 dates for him in 3 weeks. They produce ground rules to determine the “success” of each date and to protect the innocent. But they also inform Asil that there is a betting pool on the outcomes. These people know how to prick his pride, engage his protective instincts, and inspire his desire to win this “game.” There are rules. The date must last 2 hours, there will be no dead bodies, and neither party is allowed to run away. 

Apparently, three of these dating stories have been published in anthologies before. The second and fifth dates are brand new. The first date involves vampires, the second date involves tiger shifters, the third date involves an evil witch, the fourth consists of a woman who is being used by a powerful being, and the fifth brings Asil face to face with a woman who is being used by an even more powerful vampire who has connections to Mercy's nemesis, Bonarata who has chosen to move into the Seattle area to push Mercy's buttons. 

One of the more surprising aspects of this story was the fact that Briggs kept the identity of the "concerned friends" a secret right up until the final chapters. It appears that this "friend" had a suspicion about things in the area that needed to be dealt. Each "date" becomes more dangerous until Asil and his wolf reach an agreement, which should not shock anyone. The epilogue wraps up the book nicely without any cliffhangers, though the Bonarata storyline needs to be resolved soon.  




Friday, November 14, 2025

#Review - Ember Eternal by Chloe Neill #Fantasy #Romance

Series:
 Souls Burn Brightest # 1
Format: Hardcover, 416 pages
Release Date: 
November 25, 2025
Publisher: ACE
Source: Publisher
Genre: Fantasy / Romance

A new romantasy, following a thief whose dramatic encounter with an assassin and a crown bodyguard (who has dangerous secrets to keep) launches her into a world of swirling palace intrigue, from New York Times bestselling author Chloe Neill.

Fox is a thief with morals—she steals from those who can afford it and takes only a little at that. But she has no choice. Fox and her closest companion are indentured servants to an unscrupulous wealthy woman in the stronghold. Unable to pay off their debts with the work they’re given, they steal in the hopes of one day being free—truly free.

While searching for an easy mark, Fox identifies a would-be assassin with her rare magical ability and then helps a royal bodyguard fend off his vicious attack on the prince. Soon, that good deed embroils her in a vast and shimmering world of imperial politics, long-lost magic, and improbable romance. But Fox longs for freedom, and must decide if love is its own kind of cage.
 

Ember Eternal is the first installment in author Chloe Neill's Souls Burn Brightest series. This is Chloe Neill's romantasy debut, part political thriller, part slow-simmering romance, all wrapped in a magic system that's as inventive as it is haunting. If you're craving a tale where loyalty is currency, freedom is a thief's gamble, and love burns hotter than forbidden fire, this one's for you. At its core, Ember Eternal thrusts us into the life of Fox, a street-smart thief who's equal parts cunning and cautious. 

Bound in indentured servitude to an enigmatic noblewoman known only as the Lady—to settle her family's mounting debts—Fox operates on a code: steal only from the rich, take only what's needed, never get noticed, and never get caught. Oh, and let's not forget that she can see the Anima (departed souls). Her world is one of gritty survival in a sprawling empire divided into fractious regions, where the air hums with the tension of simmering rebellions and the weight of ancient pacts. 

Fox isn't alone in her shadows; she's fiercely loyal to her best friend Wren, whose banter and unbreakable bond provide some of the book's most genuine sparks of warmth. Fox and Wren are sisters in all that matters. The inciting incident—a chaotic market skirmish where Fox unwittingly aids a royal bodyguard in thwarting an assassination attempt on a highborn prince—yanks her from the fringes into the viper's nest of palace intrigue. Suddenly, our reluctant heroine is navigating gilded corridors, unraveling secrets about her own shadowed past, and dodging daggers both literal and metaphorical. 

Neill escalates the stakes from personal survival to empire-shaking conspiracies, blending high-fantasy elements like crown politics and moral ambiguity with the intimate pulse of character-driven drama. Without spoiling the twists, the plot unfolds like a well-orchestrated heist: methodical buildup, pulse-pounding action, and revelations that reframe everything you thought you knew. Fox is a morally gray delight—resourceful enough to pick a lock with a hairpin and a prayer, yet haunted by the ghosts of her choices and dreams of a family she lost 10 years ago. 

Her growth arc—from wary outsider to someone daring to claim her power to being the main thorn in the villain's goals—is the emotional heartbeat of the book. Wren, as her foil and confidante, steals scenes with her dry wit and unyielding support. Wren's own twisted story intersects with Galen, the gruff protector of the Prince, who goes toe-to-toe in a battle of wits and humor. The prince—Nik as to avoid spoilers—is a brooding standout, all sharp edges and hidden depths. 

His chemistry with Fox crackles from their first charged encounter, evolving into a romance that's as much about mutual respect as it is about magnetic pull. He tries hard to put aside the bad history of his family's name to prove he's more capable than his brothers of the Emperor Eternal. But it's the magic system that truly enchants—a tripartite cosmology of realms: Terra, the mortal plane of dust and decree; Aetheric, a shimmering domain of spirits and anima where souls flicker like eternal flames; and Oblivion, the void-haunted abyss tied to forgotten gods. 

Before I forget, I can't mention Luna, Fox's Guardian, who has her own agenda (no spoilers because it all ties into the events surrounding the ending of the book), but rarely fails to rise to the occasion when Fox is in dire need of help. If you're a fan of A Court of Thorns and Roses meets The Priory of the Orange Tree, then this story is definitely for you. As a recommendation: If you have read the author's previous series, this series will be very different. It's a different world, new characters, and perhaps a new direction in the author's writing career as well.  





Wednesday, November 12, 2025

#Review - A Scar in the Bone by Sophie Jordan #Fantasy #Romance

Series:
 A Fire in the Sky # 2
Format: 
360 pages, Hardcover
Release Date: October 14, 2025
Publisher: Avon
Source: Publisher
Genre: Fantasy / Romance / Dragons

Magic awakens. Darkness swells. A hero rises—and she’s ready to fight… New York Times bestselling author Sophie Jordan is back with an all-new epic romantasy set in the high-stakes world of A Fire in the Sky.

It’s been a year since Tamsyn transformed. From royal whipping girl in the palace of Penterra to the bride of Fell, the Beast of the Borderlands. From the enemy in the Beast’s bed to the wife he sacrificed himself to save. From an ordinary girl...to a dragon. And not just any dragon—a powerful fire-breather...and the best hope to keep magic from flickering out forever.

With Fell gone, torn from her side in the dangerous swirling mists of the Crags, Tamsyn is heartbroken and alone among the dragon pride. An unwelcome outsider still learning to survive in this fiery skin of hers within a new cutthroat society, she trains in the arena until her muscles burn and her blood spills. Slowly, Tamsyn forges herself into a warrior in the shadow of Fell’s enigmatic brother, Vetr, whose silver eyes track her with distrust...and maybe something more.

But is Fell truly beyond her reach? Their bond pulls at her, as fiercely as the drive to protect both humans and dragonkind from the growing threat posed by Stig, once her closest friend, now a relentless enemy determined to hunt her down and destroy her—and with her, all things magic.

Magic stirs in the darkness, strengthening all who believe in it. But will it be enough to save Tamsyn, the pride, the kingdom...and a fiery love fated to endure for centuries, as deep as a scar in the bone?


A Scar in the Bone is the second installment in author Sophie Jordan's A Fire in the Sky series. This story takes place one year after the ending of A Fire in the SkyBetween Fourth Wing and A Court of Thorn and Roses, fantasy and romantasy are all the rage. This is the perfect moment to return to the world of Firelight, a popular HarperTeen series Jordan released over ten years ago. Set thousands of years before FirelightA Fire in the Sky kicks off a brand-new series featuring dragons, witches, and deadly warriors. Fast-paced, thrilling, and sexy, this is perfect for the market and her young readers who are all grown up now and looking for a spicy read!

If you're new to the series, start with A Fire in the Sky (2024)—this sequel builds directly on its cliffhanger, and reading out of order would leave you lost in the lore. It's been a year since Tamsyn's world shattered: once a human whipping girl in the royal court, she discovered her latent dragon heritage, married the brooding Lord of the Borderlands (Fell), and watched him vanish into the perilous mists of the Crags to save her. Now, presumed dead, Fell leaves Tamsyn adrift in his clan's dragon pride, led by his enigmatic twin brother, Vetr. 

As an outsider in this cutthroat society of fire-breathers, Tamsyn must shed her human vulnerabilities—training brutally in the arena, spilling blood to prove her worth, and grappling with a culture that views witches and humans as existential threats. Yet her fated bond with Fell tugs at her soul, whispering he's alive, even as new dangers emerge: a vengeful former ally turned enemy (Stig) rises to power, magic itself flickers under assault, and Tamsyn's dual heritage forces her to choose sides in a brewing war between species. Amid grief, forbidden desires, and a swelling darkness, Tamsyn evolves from fragile survivor to fierce warrior, but at what cost to her heart and the fragile hope of coexistence? 

Jordan's prose crackles with tension, delivering an "explosive" sequel where the fate of magic—and a love "as deep as a scar in the bone"—hangs by a thread. The dragon pride's society feels alive and treacherous—think hierarchical clans with ritualistic combats, ancient grudges against humans and witches, and a magic system tied to belief and bloodlines that "stirs in the darkness" to empower the faithful. Tamsyn's arc from naive, grief-stricken widow to a "fiercer woman who knows what she wants," including allowing herself to feel something for Fell's brother. Her internal conflict—torn between human empathy and draconic ferocity, mourning a lost mate while navigating unwanted advances—forces authentic evolution. 

Not everything is perfect. Not every flight is smooth. The biggest snag is the infamous time jump: opening a full year post-cliffhanger dumps readers into a "confusing" new status quo—Fell's absence, Tamsyn's integration into the pride, and seismic plot shifts (like Stig's rise)—without enough connective tissue. Pacing suffers too: the first half meanders through grief and training montages that feel "flat" or "one-note," with lulls where "not much actually happens" before abrupt bursts of action. Another fault line must also be discussed. The ending? Abrupt and underdeveloped for what was billed as a duology—twists land, but resolution feels rushed, with an epilogue teasing book three that leaves you "unsatisfied" and questioning loose ends like the king's motives or witch involvement. 




Friday, November 7, 2025

#Review - Nash Falls by David Baldacci #Thriller #Suspense

Series:
 Walter Nash # 1
Format: 
448 pages, Hardcover
Release Date: November 11, 2025
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Source: Publisher
Genre: Thriller / Suspense

When Walter Nash is recruited by the FBI to help bring down a global crime network his life is turned completely upside down in this thriller from #1 New York Times bestselling author David Baldacci.

Nash is an intelligent man, tough but fair-minded. He has a wife and a daughter and a very high-level position at Sybaritic Investments, where his innate skills and dogged tenacity have carried him to the top of the pyramid in his business career. Despite never going on grand adventures, and always working too many hours, he has a happy and upscale life with his family.

However, following his estranged Vietnam-veteran father’s funeral, Nash is unexpectedly approached by the FBI in the middle of the night. They have an important request: become their inside man to expose an enterprise that is laundering large sums of money through Sybaritic. At the top of this illegal operation is Victoria Steers, an international criminal mastermind that the FBI has been trying to bring down for years.

Nash has little choice but to accept the FBI’s demands and try to bring Steers and her partners to justice. But when Steers discovers that Nash is working with the FBI, she turns the tables on him in a way he never could have contemplated. And that forces Nash to take the ultimate step both to survive and to take his revenge: He must become the exact opposite of who he has always been.
And even that may not be enough.


Nash Falls is the first installment in author David Baldacci's Walter Nash series. With Nash Falls, Baldacci ventures into fresh territory: the cutthroat world of white-collar crime colliding with personal vendetta. At its core, Nash Falls is a story of transformation under duress, blending financial thriller elements with visceral action sequences. We meet Walter Nash not as a grizzled operative, but as an everyman success story: a brilliant, empathetic financier at the pinnacle of Sybaritic Investments, a powerhouse firm that's equal parts Wall Street glamour and hidden rot. 

Married to Judith (cheater, oh sorry, spoiler!) and father to the spirited teen Maggie, who thinks she will become an overnight influencer, Nash's life is a testament to quiet ambition—long hours offset by family dinners and the occasional weekend hike. But tranquility shatters at his estranged Vietnam vet father's funeral, when midnight knocks from the FBI upend everything. The bureau's pitch? Infiltrate your own company as an unwitting asset in a sprawling money-laundering scheme tied to a global crime syndicate.

At the helm is Victoria Steers, a chillingly charismatic "criminal mastermind" who's evaded capture for years, her operations funneled through Sybaritic, like a venomous serpent coiled in the boardroom, with ties that lead back to powerful Chinese interests. What starts as a reluctant undercover gig spirals into a nightmare of betrayal, blackmail, and brutal reprisals. Nash, thrust into a web of corporate espionage and personal peril, must shed his civilized skin to strike back—evolving from ledger-balancer to something far more primal. 

The plot zigs and zags with classic Baldacci flair: red herrings in quarterly reports, chases through rain-slicked urban alleys, and revelations that hit like gut punches. Yet, true to its series-starter status, the book builds toward a cliffhanger finale that's equal parts exhilarating and exasperating—resolving the immediate crisis while dangling threads for book two. Walter Nash is Baldacci's strongest creation here—a protagonist whose ordinariness makes his arc all the more compelling. 

He's no super-spy; he's a guy who'd rather crunch numbers than crack skulls, with vulnerabilities that feel achingly real: the guilt over a distant father, the terror of endangering his family, and a quiet rage that simmers until it boils over. His evolution from buttoned-up exec to revenge-fueled avenger is the emotional engine, rendered with enough nuance to avoid clichés, though it occasionally strains credulity (more on that below). Supporting the lead is a rogues' gallery that shines in spots but falters in others. 

Victoria Steers is a standout villain—ruthless, seductive, and intellectually matched to Nash —evoking a feminine echo of Baldacci's past antagonists, like those in the Atlee Pine series. She's not cartoonishly evil; her monologues on power and loyalty reveal a twisted philosophy that lingers. Then there's Shock (real name: Isaiah York), Nash's late father's battle-hardened comrade and a security savant. As the grizzled mentor figure, Shock injects heart and humor, his tough-love banter providing levity amid the darkness. Where the cast stumbles is in the periphery: Rhett Temple, Nash's sleazy boss and son of the firm founder, embodies every oily corporate trope, while secondary FBI agents blur into interchangeable suits who seem to be constantly chasing ghosts instead of actually indicting anyone.

This is a good start to the series. I was surprised that this book ended on a cliffhanger, but after everything Nash goes through in this book, we need to see how this all plays out.