Curse of the Dragon Shadow is the 1st book in the Shadow Dragon Saga series by Selina A. Fenech. This is a post-apocalyptic, dystopian YA fantasy featuring runes, curses, magical items, dragons, revenants, and unicorns with healing blood. It also carries hints of a Sapphic romance to come later in the series.
In a world haunted by the Shadow Dragon, where unicorns have been hunted to extinction because of their blood and dragons are owned by dragonlords, a creature unlike any is born – a dragon carrying unicorn blood. Orphaned and struggling to survive in an underground refuge, Riony wants to keep her adopted sister Lyrrin safe, but suddenly she is also the caretaker of the precious creature. When her sister is kidnapped together with other kids, Riony sets out on a journey with a few others into the cursed overworld where she faces one danger after the other. The Shadow Dragon's curse seems to be much more powerful than it once used to and survival is not guaranteed for anyone. Can she save her sister and protect the newborn creature or will sacrifices have to be made?
It was a fast-paced and quick read full of action, so you didn’t really have time to get bored. The writing style of the author is mostly easy to follow and the flow of the story is good. The world building is done throughout the book, so you don’t get too much information all at once. There are some interesting descriptions of the landscape, which give quite a good overall picture and the idea behind it is unique enough. The backstory is slowly introduced revealing the complicated relationships between different characters, yet there are some big gaps left, which will probably be addressed in the next books as the story evolves. The characters are realistic, with positive traits as well as negative ones. Riony is fierce, sassy, absurdly strong and tends to act before she thinks, her adopted sister Lyrrin is quieter, but brave, logical and rather stubborn. She has a soft spot, but hides it well. Both of them carry some history and have a mystery surrounding them. There are a number of promising side characters too, who will probably play a bigger role later in the story. However Rionys attitude towards Aishen (a delver on the mission with her) felt a bit forced and unrealistic…didn’t come naturally and made her seem rude and well…annoying. So, there is no romance in book, but there will probably eventually be a Sapphic romance. All in all, this book kind of shows the essence of humanity…at its worst. There is so much cruelty and the nature is off-balance. I cannot wait to see, what will become of Dracuni. The book is part of a series, but I guess it can be read as a stand-alone too, however you will want to know more in the end.
Anyway, I enjoyed the book and am looking forward to the next book to see where the story goes from here.
I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.