ove. Love love love. Like this book literally comes out today, and I want book 2 NOW and because it's a trilogy I'm guessing I want book 3 now too. If you're wondering how I read this, thanks to @orbitbooks_us and net galley for the arc.
The world building in this book is literally phenomenal. I haven't read something so unique and immersive in a long time. Yes, I still have some questions, and yet that doesn't bug me because I feel like they're part of the mystery of the story, and they are questions because the main characters don't know either. Literally, one of the POVs is working to solve it in a way, but all of them are learning more, and so the reader is too.
Since this is an arc, a short run down of things... basically, mortals ruined the world, creating machines that ran on magic. But as humanity does, they stripped every last source of magic, not caring about what they were doing. One mortal makes his way to the gods and begs them to restore the world. Only one God answers, but his restoration has a steep price. He shatters the world into pieces, separated by magic too toxic to pass easily, and remakes the world piece by piece. But restoration means only 50% of the people survive, and in surviving, they are altered. It also means he wants to be the only God anyone can worship.
Ha, there's so much more to this with God wars and mortal wars and all kinds of crazy turmoil. But 570 years after the shattering, enter our characters....
There's Hakara. LOVE HER. She's fierce, determined, and RECKLESS. She's got one goal, and she's going to achieve that goal no matter the cost around her. Girl makes mistakes, but you have to admire her grittiness at the same time. Yet if you're willing to give everything to one goal, what happens if it's not what you expect?
There's Rasha. Sweet, loveable Rasha trying to turn herself from someone protected to someone who can protect herself. My heart breaks for Rasha. It's not a gentle world for lovers, and what breaks when you're forced to change yourself to survive?
There's Sheuan. Raised and trained
to be everything needed to raise her
clan back to the status it lost when
her father was executed. The only
thing she knows is duty to her
family, but how far can duty a people
willing to let you die take you?
There's Mullayne. A way too smart,
io social skills, sort of person. He
wants to find the path to where the
gods live that one mortal took 570
years ago, in order to beg a boon of
his own. His life's work has been
finding this path, and now that he's
found will he survive it?
And then there's Nioanen. One of
the Elder Gods and his POV offers a
look at the world preShattering. I
loved this because there's so much
we don't know 570 years later, and
since a lot of this mystery is key to
the plot, his POV offers hints at
solving it. I fing love having to work
to figure things out. I loved loved
finding out at the end, one of my guess was right.
This has become a very long review, so bonus points if you're still here. won't talk much about the plot because, as mentioned, there's a lot of mystery and realization to it, and I don't want to spoil any of that.| will t s only say I loved the pacing. It's a slow, steady ramp to the end in all the best ways. Yes, there are brief noments of action that are like pseudo ramp up, but I think the overall pace was steady, and I haven't read a book with solid pacing like this in way too long. I got more and more engaged until I just couldn't put it down. Long story short, I loved this book. It's definitely on my short list for fave book of 2024 now. It's my first Andrea Stewart book, but it just jumped her Bone Shard Trilogy up my tbr.