One of my favourite authors returns to the DFZ with another sequel series to the Heartstrikers. I ADORED the first DFZ sequel series (starting with Minimum Wage Magic) almost as much as the original Heartstrikers series.
Minimum Wage Magic focussed far more on the humans and human mages (thaumaturges and shamans, mostly, with some draconic support characters), whereas this one focusses on a changeling (as made clear by the series title), blood magic, and spirits. Worldbuilding has always been one of the strengths of these inter-connected series, and By A Silver Thread is no different.
The two DFZ series are also a little more mature than Heartstrikers - with our MCs being in their late 20s as opposed to late teens/early 20s, and that tonal shift works very well. It heightens the stakes, and makes every encounter fraught with tension and dread.
Despite expanding the world, magic, and introducing us to a new cast of characters, By A Silver Thread doesn’t quite reach the heights of Heartstrikers or the first DFZ series for me. Lola is a perfectly good protagonist - she wrestles constantly with her monstrous “other” self while being indebted to the man/crime-lord who “rescued” her as a child, but it does take her a while to figure out things and listen xD
However, she is a definite underdog in a magical city surrounded by very powerful people (not all of whom are friendly), and she does well for herself given the stakes that are against her.
Early on, said crime-lord disappears, but instead of this being an event to celebrate, widespread panic ripples through Lola and everyone else who “works” for him, in various levels of debt.
We have also a fairy side-plot with the previous Fairy Queen’s defeat, and new fae scrambling for power and control. How these two plots are interlinked is great, and I was glad we got to see more of them, rather than a throwaway character here and there. Tristan is probably my favourite of all the characters in this - deadly and dangerous but a powerful ally, too.
I loved the detail of fae magic, barrows, belief, and how everything fits together. It was brilliantly crafted.
Pacing was pretty break-neck from beginning to end, with only a few quieter moments where we could catch our breath. Almost all of these slower scenes revolved around Lola and the Rider character, which was okay but felt a little rushed. Even at the end, there didn’t seem to be much emotional reaction from Lola to things that happened, which I’d expected.
I did manage to figure out the “twist” quite early on (some big hints were dropped around chapter five and six) so that took a little fun out of it (but yay on me for paying attention and being able to predict something), although the majority of how it all came together was a delight to read and discover. The world has some very good, solid rules that help readers figure out things, which definitely helped!
I will mention I was not a fan of the narrator - mostly because of the constant pausing? It felt like there were full stop-length pauses at random parts of a sentence, which came across as jarring more often than not, and was part of the reason I stopped listening to The Last Stand of Mary Good Crow (which had the same narrator).
e.g. “You lucked out tonight because the changeling had already decided to go to the concert without. Any further urging from you.”
A few lines also seemed to have been re-recorded here and there, so occasionally in the middle of a paragraph or scene, there would be one super loud line before the rest of the narration continued at the previous volume.
Overall a great continuation of this world and series. Book two is very clearly set up at the end of this one, along with several unfinished threads/character locations etc., and I am intrigued as to where the story will go!