I received an advance copy of this book for free from Netgalley.
The Twisted Mark definitely isn't a book for everyone. It's a dark romance with characters whose morality is all some shade of grey, including our main character, Sadie. It is, in some cases, very tropey (in both good and bad ways). But personally, I found this to be an engaging, plot-driven read with a believable MC and an interesting love story.
I think what stood out to me most was Williamson's foreshadowing of the plot twist. Right from the start we're questioning whether the characters Sadie introduces us to are actually the 'good guys', especially when her family seem to be lording it over a small Yorkshire town like feudal medieval nobility, or when her father can't keep a lid on his physically violent temper and punishes his subordinates for events out of their control. We even question Sadie's morality when she ends up sleeping with someone who is under the impression she is someone else (and would not have slept with her if he knew her real identity), and I liked that the narrative doesn't let Sadie off for this bad decision. Similarly, we come to see that actually, the Sadlers are arguably the real bad guys - though their rival family are not necessarily the good guys, either. That is the main theme of The Twisted Mark, and I think where it is strongest - showing that all the characters are both good and evil, susceptible to making mistakes, and have their own motivations and reasons for doing what they do, no matter how skewed they may be. Sadie's character is particularly interesting, as she reads really well as someone who has essentially been brainwashed by her family all her life, and I liked that she was realistically pressured into doing things by them, and she didn't just give them up the minute a hot guy came along. She even nearly kills her love interest and then has to grapple with her feelings about that, and I loved that she was such a morally grey protagonist.
One of the other strong points of this novel was the pacing, with the murder mystery and other questions being asked and revealed at a fast, snappy pace that always made me want to keep reading. In fact, I think I finished this in about three days because I was so hooked! This is a plot-driven book as much as it is a romance, and I think it's much stronger for that. I have to say I also really loved that Sadie doesn't get with Gabriel at the end of the novel, instead telling him (quite rightly) that he needs to work on himself before she can be with him. I found that super refreshing, and it really made Sadie feel real to me - that she can recognise her love interest's flaws and ask him to change, rather than just falling into his arms as a formulaic plot would demand.
The Twisted Mark is not without flaws, however. It was annoying to me that Gabriel claimed to be on the side of the innocent people of the town against the Sadlers, yet at various points he treated non-magical people with little regard, much like they do. There are also some boring, tired tropes reproduced wholesale (if I could never again read about a character who is cartoonishly obsessed with drinking coffee that would be great, thanks), and at times Sadie's narration feels like it's trying too hard to signal to us that she's #relatable, making her come off a little bland, especially in the beginning. Also there's a strange aside (I believe when she's sleeping with Connor) throwing shade on doing it doggy-style, which, come the fuck on. Judging people for what sex position they like is not, in fact, feminist.
Overall, though, The Twisted Mark is intriguing, fast-paced, full of interesting characters, and allows itself to break out of the well-trodden romance novel formula on several occasions. Williamson manages to use many classic dark magic romance tropes in fun ways while also not being afraid to let her characters be believably dark, and she manages to craft a gripping read with a fabulous sequel hook that has me really intrigued to read her next novel in the series.