4.5 stars! OMG screaming, finally a romantic fantasy that has actual world-building and a clear magic system. I read this in a day, and I couldn't put it down.
After thirty years of closed borders, the city of Seboia has been victim to an increasing number of attacks from the Gods Cursed Soulless. And its fae and immortal citizens with elemental magic are at the Soulless' mercy. Darius, the Captain of the Seboian Guard, is in charge of protecting his kingdom. But his duty begins to waver when a group of mysterious travelers enter the kingdom, one of whom is Lena. Lena has one purpose in Seboia—something that does not include falling in love with Darius. But as enemies lurk closer, Lena and Darius are thrust onto a new path.
I loved how the book immediately jumped into the action and was a very harsh introduction to the state of the kingdom. The first 100 pages of the book threw me into the world and did a great job of establishing that there's a looming threat, even though everyone seems to be at peace. Adelphia was easily one of the most interesting characters. I love how the prologue was in her POV, and that completely contrasted with the portrayal of her being cold and detached in the rest of the book.
The world-building was so interesting. The elemental magic, with jewel markings, alongside rarer gifts was great. It was easy to visualize the physical setting and the magic.
It was a pleasant surprise after the prologue that there was humor and banter throughout the book. Based on the first few chapters, I thought this would be a much darker fantasy, but the dialogue was fairly light-hearted and often comedic.
The side characters were great, and I loved how Amara, Aurora, Zander, Kade, Griffin, and Tristan all had distinct personalities. And why did I like all of the side characters more than the main characters?
While the book was overall great, it did slow down in pacing during the middle, before picking back up again. I didn't fully understand the insta-love and insta-bond between Darius and Lena. It felt a bit unnatural, and Darius' possessiveness over Lena was a bit too much after he knew her for all of five seconds. And there were some choice words in the spice that were, let's say, not my cup of tea.
And while I love a good scheming unreliable female narrator, there was not enough information about Lena and her realm revealed in this book. I know it's a series, but I wish we got more answers in this book about who Lena was and where she came from. The lack of knowledge made me feel detached to Lena as a character. I also wish there was more information about what fate and the gods had planned for Darius.
But could not recommend this book more for romantasy readers who lean more towards the fantasy part of romantasy!
Thank you so much to The Nerd Fam and Ella Dawes for sending me an ARC of To Bleed a Kingdom. As always, my reviews are one hundred percent voluntary and all opinions are my own :)