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Convergence Saga #3

A Ruin, Great and Free

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From bestselling and award-winning author Cadwell Turnbull comes A Ruin, Great and Free, the stunning conclusion to the popular Convergence Saga.

It has been nearly two years since the anti-monster riots. The inhabitants of Moon have been very fortunate in the intervening months. Inside their hidden monster settlement, they’ve found peace, even as the world outside slips into increasing unrest. Monsters are being hunted everywhere, forced back into the shadows they once tried to escape from. Other secret settlements have offered a place to hide, but how long can this half-measure against fear and hatred last?

Over the course of three days, the inhabitants of Moon are tested. The Black Hand continues to search for them and the Cult of the Zsouvox wants to make Moon the last stand in their war against the Order of Asha. This is more than enough to reckon with, but the gods have also placed their sights on Moon—and they bring with them a conflict that may either save or unravel the universe itself.

320 pages, Kindle Edition

First published September 16, 2025

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6327 people want to read

About the author

Cadwell Turnbull

31 books872 followers
Hello, I'm Cadwell Turnbull, author of the science fiction novel The Lesson and the Convergence Saga.

My short fiction has appeared in The Verge, Lightspeed, Nightmare, Asimov’s Science Fiction and a number of anthologies, including Jordan Peele's Out There Screaming. My short story “Loneliness is in Your Blood” was selected for The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy 2018. My short story "Jump" was selected for the Year's Best Science Fiction and Fantasy 2019.

The Lesson was the recipient of the 2020 Neukom Institute Literary Award. My novel No Gods, No Monsters was the winner of a Lambda and a finalist for the Shirley Jackson Award. We Are the Crisis was a finalist for the Manly Wade Wellman Award and an Ignyte Award.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 33 reviews
Profile Image for Ellen Gail.
911 reviews434 followers
July 4, 2025
Cadwell Turnbull has impressed me yet again. This trilogy is such a hidden gem, full of delightful, intense, untethered weirdness.

A monster keeps on living. A monster survives out of spite.

I can't lie to you. I don't think I fully understand this story. And I don't think I have to, not yet at least. It's a dense narrative, switching among characters (including gods and monsters,) alternate realities, even universes. It explores ostracization, suppression, and hate, but also destiny and hope. It's got layers, like an ogre onion. Or if you'd like a more aesthetically pleasing comparison, a Matryoshka doll.

I think it's the kind of complex story that is a satisfying first read, but far from easy to comprehend. It needs to sit in my brain and digest for a while.

For now, I am content to have experienced this. Cause damn, it is an experience.

On the outside, a normal scene. On the inside, a storm. She will uphold the fiction for as long as she can.

A Ruin, Great and Free is a culmination of a deeply felt and fantastic story; it's also nearly impossible to describe. What am I reading? Oh, just a high concept queer fantasy about the nature of life and living and what it means to be a monster.

It also features a battle between a giant werebear and a dragon. Yes, that is as awesome as it sounds.

I don't know what else I can say about this series. It's a unique and immersive experience; it's a contradicting mix of modern and timeless, filled with violence and in depth explorations of the motivations and meanings behind the bloodshed. It's hard to understand and by no means an easy read, but I'm happy to have read it.

Big thanks to Edelweiss and Blackstone Publishing for the digital review copy!
All quotes come this version and may appear differently in published version
Profile Image for Kiki.
227 reviews193 followers
December 10, 2025
Dec 10, 2025

“What is quantum mechanics? Quantum mechanics is our theory of almost everything that we observe, but it mostly matters on very small scales.” - Andrew H. Jaffe, author of "The Random Universe: How Models and Probability Help Us Make Sense of the Cosmos" on the New Books in Mathematics podcast

At the end of this journey, I'd state that Cadwell Turnbull took that basic concept of quantum mechanics and turned into a beating heart. This is a placeholder for a fuller review after I post on IG.





Sept 2025
The stars don't mean anything except perhaps that I am hyped for the re-read. I finished it and it feels as if it's left me at the beginning staring into a void perilously transfixed. P Djèlí Clark once stated in an interview that when books seem to predict the present it isn't that the authors are prophets they just know history. With this Saga, Turnbull speculates with the idea that it is something mor.
Profile Image for Meg.
2,061 reviews94 followers
September 18, 2025
In the finale to the Convergence Saga, Cadwell Turnbull lets out all the stops with gods, monsters, politics, identity, and intrigue. We step into the multiverse more deeply in A Ruin, Great and Free, and while many of the characters from No Gods, No Monsters and We are the Crisis are role players here, they pale in comparison to the gods behind the scenes rolling the dice and playing with their lives.

This series is an incredible work of contemporary fantasy, primarily set in Boston and the Virgin Islands, with cutting commentary on those who do and don't belong in society mixed with communal politics and an all too familiar social fear of Other. The queer normativity and diverse cast feel natural to the storytelling, especially with folklore from around the world folded neatly into the character layers. Turnbull uses a variety of perspectives and tenses to tell different parts of the story, which work well from a craft perspective.

I listened to the audiobook narrated by Dion Graham, who elevates the story to the next level. I found that he gave a performance balanced between fear and power, and I recommend the audio. That said there are a lot of characters and multiple timelines, so be wary if that's something you prefer to read with your eyes.

As this is the third book in a now-finished trilogy, you must read these in order. I highly recommend reading all three fairly close together to watch the character arcs and see the groundwork Turnbull lays throughout. And see above: there are a lot of characters, which means the longer the time between reading the less likely you are to remember the nuance of each.

Thank you to Blackstone for an eARC and ALC. A Ruin, Great and Free is out 9/16.
Profile Image for Sasha (bahareads).
932 reviews83 followers
January 2, 2026
4.5 stars

ABSOLUTE CINEMA.

"'value is in the heart and the hands. I know what I’m doing and why I’m doing it, and it has meaning to me… i’ve untrapped myself. I am as wide as the universe.'"

It's hard to put into the words my thoughts on this series and this book in particular. Turnbull does a fantastic job of creating a multi layered plot with dynamic characters, worlds, and universes. A multiverse story that deserves its place in Science Fiction pantheon of fame.

I think I'll have to do a re-read of the entire trilogy with notes to full explain it all.
Profile Image for Rodger’s Reads.
393 reviews130 followers
December 1, 2025
4 ⭐️

I fee like this is one of those series that is truly a whole that is greater than the sum of its parts. The way it toyed with familiar urban fantasy and X-men type characters, but kept it simultaneously personal and focused on the community despite literal god shenanigans was truly fascinating. If you are looking for a very unique trilogy, especially if you are someone who loves a feeling in interconnected stories that all come together by the end, this is a series for you.
Profile Image for Tyson Vaughan.
96 reviews4 followers
October 5, 2025
Loved this. OK, here's my quick summary of this trilogy (now tetralogy — see below):

No Gods, No Monsters: 5 stars. Lots of characters and ideas — maybe more than ideal, but still coherent enough, and just beautifully written, with several of those truly gobsmacking moments that only the best science fiction can offer.

We Are the Crisis: 3 stars. What the trilogy needed was more focus on the characters we already had, not more characters and less focus. It felt like Turnbull was being rushed by his publisher, and ended up packing a bunch of stuff haphazardly into this book. Still beautifully written, and at least one of the new characters was compelling. Nevertheless, I kinda feel like new readers of this trilogy would be better served by skimming this, or just reading a summary. (Side note.... I have to admit that I asked Google Gemini to provide a summary of this book for me, to help refresh my memory before I started A Ruin, Great and Free, and my reaction to reading the summary was: "Did I actually read this book? Is Gemini summarizing the right book?" A bunch of the characters and plot points didn't even ring a bell.)

A Ruin, Great and Free: 4 stars. Still packed with characters and ideas, but more focused and readable, with a more definable narrative arc, than its predecessors. In some ways, this is my favorite of the three. The conclusion is quite satisfying, and I have to say, that is something that I'm finding less often in trilogies these days.

Two caveats here.

First, this book brings in the events of Turnbull's debut sci-fi novel, The Lesson, as important backstory for part of the Convergence series. Ergo, the Convergence series isn't really a trilogy after all, but rather a tetralogy. I haven't read The Lesson and I don't think it is necessary to have read it to understand and enjoy A Ruin, Great and Free; however, I do think it would be helpful. But actually I enjoyed how Turnbull made this link, so I don't consider this a negative. It makes me wonder if his entire oeuvre will take place in an Akashaverse, just like Sanderson has his Cosmere. The Lesson is now on my TBR.

Second, A Ruin, Great and Free ties all the loose ends, as you would expect. Which means it carries forward the arcs of the proliferation of characters we met in the previous two books... and that drags on the reading experience. Quite often in reading this novel, I struggled to remember who a particular character was — especially those characters introduced in We Are the Crisis. I frequently found myself wishing that there was a dramatis personae glossary and maybe even a brief summary at the beginning of the book. (There is actually a summary in this book, but it's part of the heroes' preparations for the final conflict.) This caveat is the main reason I held back a star.

Turnbull's talent is undeniable. I am really curious to see what he does next, because with the Convergence series, he has already swung for the fences — in fact, if he's at the plate in Dodger Stadium, he just swung for the fences at Fenway. In some ways, this is the most ambitiously epic series I've ever read. The novels are not long, but they tackle the Biggest questions and they stretch the imagination to its limits. The Convergence series is Lovecraftian — not just because it contains monsters and horror elements, but because it dares to try to imagine and convey places and things the comprehension of which simply cannot fit inside a puny primate's skull.

Surely not for everyone, but absolutely worth a go, if you are into having your mind blown by a sci-fi novel about werewolves and vampires and aliens and gods and tech mages and shadow mages and multiverses and the Beast Under the World and narrators who become part of the story in surprising ways.

P.S. Dion Graham is my favorite audiobook voice actor, bar none. No, he can't match the ability of a Jeff Hays to emulate a multitude of different voices. But his ability to emote with pitch-perfect nuance is unparalleled. You have to hear him to understand how compelling he truly is.
Profile Image for Dan Trefethen.
1,213 reviews75 followers
September 27, 2025
There are a lot of threads to pull together in this third book in the series (fourth if you count his first novel 'The Lesson', thematically related). I'm not sure I made all the connections and accounted for all the characters. There's a lot.

Without giving away spoilers, I'll say that gods and monsters have a universe-expanding conclusion. It gets pretty metaphysical at the end (not to mention metaphorical), right after the epic battle that things have been building towards.
Profile Image for Steve's Book Stuff.
367 reviews17 followers
May 28, 2025
A Ruin Great and Free is the third book in the Convergence Saga trilogy by author Cadwell Turnbull. (I’ve read and reviewed the first two books as well — here and here). The title appears more than halfway through the book in the in the midst of a monster fight as Alex (also known as Amethyst) squares off to fight her mother / not mother. Alex is crying and has blood on her face. “She is a canvas dripping with wet paint”, Turnbull writes, “a ruin, great and free.”

That scene is indicative of the whole series. Turnbull writes with great skill and knows how to turn a phrase. He knows how to build a story and people it with characters who draw you right in. And this story - the monster fight - is one of many across multiple universes that are woven together in this series.

I wrote about the first book that it was “beautifully written and keeps you turning the pages to find out what happens next - and to figure out what the heck is going on.” The same held true for the second book. The beautiful writing and interest to see how this all turns out carry through this third book too.

The mix of human stories, monster stories, god stories, and the combinations between them, across the multiverse, can be hard to keep track of for a reader. But the great writing and intriguing ideas has kept me coming back.

The books in this series are concerned with a lot of notions but how to build community seems to emerge across the series as chief among them. In A Ruin Great and Free the monsters have separated themselves from humans for safety and are building community in a rebuilt ghost town they call Moon.

The community supports itself through banding together into cooperatives to produce products they are able to magically transport into human society, hoping to keep humans from finding them. Humans don’t like monsters and there are humans who would bring violence to Moon.

Later in the book we observe a legal proceeding among the gods. It’s hard to convey what’s at stake there in a short review but suffice it to say that we learn more about the community of gods in this book than we have so far throughout the series.

The book did not end the way I thought it might, but it was a satisfying conclusion. And with that end comes the end to this series of books that is challenging to read but really well written. The series raises issues and explores concepts that really make you think.

I raised mild criticism of the second book for its dense plotting, and if anything, it’s gotten denser with this third book. But this book benefits from building a conclusion from the characters introduced in books 1 and 2. So, even though the stories come fast and furious, you aren’t trying to understand who all the characters are (though I did have to go back and skim books 1 and 2 a couple of times to jog my memory).
Profile Image for Laura.
590 reviews43 followers
October 26, 2025
In the first book of the trilogy, the reality of monsters was revealed to the world; the book follows monsters coming to self-understanding, organizing, and forming communities. In the second, the world grapples with this reality, and human supremacist forces challenge pro-monster solidarity efforts. This third installment is, of course, where it all converges: the multiple POVs here include those of monsters but also mages and gods, and the stakes of the conflicts are the highest they could be. Compared to the first two, this novel is just as complex and dense as the others, but does provide a satisfying conclusion and reads as a bit more continuous (in that POVs / contexts are revisited more frequently). With this series, Turnbull has somehow simultaneously explored complex themes – community, otherness, and belonging, implications of multiverse cosmologies – with a high energy plot where a dragon battles giants, competing forces aim to influence policy-making (by carrot, stick, and combinations thereof), and the fate of the not just the universe but existence itself hangs in the balance. What a series!

This is a really complicated series with a lot of moving parts, and this third installment really seems to zoom out and give a wider sense of the interconnections between different characters and events in the first two. I think I may re-read this series at some point, without taking years-long breaks between while waiting for the next installment; as much as I really enjoyed this, I know that I didn’t quite ‘get’ everything.

Content warnings: violence, murder, body horror, blood, gore, grief

Thank you to Blackstone Publishing, the author, & NetGalley for providing me with an ARC to review.
Profile Image for Savannah.
277 reviews21 followers
October 1, 2025
I don't necessarily know what I read, but it's so beautiful I don't care! I love Cadwell Turnbull's prose. A Ruin, Great and Free is perhaps the most complicated and least linear entry in this trilogy, spanning different characters, timelines and universes. We don't even know who is narrating all the time. This is a complex, atmospheric read, and I'm here for it. The audiobook production is perfect and Dion Graham can read a phone book and I'd listen. This trilogy would definitely benefit from a reread without the gaps between publishing of the volumes.
Profile Image for Alan.
1,272 reviews158 followers
Want to read
September 23, 2025
Rec. by: Dan T.; previous work
9 reviews1 follower
July 6, 2025
A Ruin, Great and Free is an unexpected culminating installment that both suites its series namesake, Convergence, and is a significant departure from the first two books. This is a series where community is not only a character, but the main protagonist. We've progressed from learning about the players, through the forming of their community, and finally we see a community fight for its existence, and importantly, how a community persists in the aftermath of tragedy.

This starts as a series about humanity in a world with werewolves and tech mages and incomprehensible gods. With this book, things get weird. We dive into ontology and metaphysics of a sprawling pantheon with its own power struggles amongst the gods. Reading it, I could see the lines of how the themes and project of the earlier books leads us to this one, and yet it's not the third and final book that I was expecting, and in some ways wanted, for this series. Cadwell Turnbull is fantastic at capturing small, simple moments that pack such a wallop of humanity, sorrow, and compassion, and this book largely takes a step back from the small and goes big. For a final book, there is so much new introduced that it can be overwhelming and distracting at times. This makes for some mind blowing moments and implications, but also isn't what I originally loved about these books.

Overall, I struggle with writing this review. The first two books are all time favorites for me, and this one is not there (yet), but at the same time I may have even more thoughts after this book than the others. It still has Turnbull's thoughtful, powerful-through-its-simplicity style. It wraps up the many, many threads of this series in a satisfyingly ambiguous way. Despite my internal conflict between what I wanted this book to be and what this book is, it is a good book, and strong ending, to a great series.

Thanks again to NetGalley and Blackstone Publishing for an advanced copy in exchange for my review!
Profile Image for Marlene.
3,451 reviews241 followers
December 31, 2025
First, this was wow. And second, and third, and as it turns out, fourth. Not always a cohesive wow, but a wow all the same.

It’s also the conclusion to an epic whose whole is DEFINITELY greater than the sum of its parts. But you really need the parts – and if it’s been awhile a refresher on the parts, No Gods, No Monsters and We Are the Crisis – to help you make this ‘fracture’ of the multiverse cohere into something like a single story.

Because the story is considerably larger than the page count of the books would suggest.

From some perspectives – and there are plenty to choose from – this is a story about otherness and equality and justice and activism to bring about the last three for the first. While it uses literal monsters, werewolves and vampires and invisible people and magic users, as metaphors for otherness, it does not shy away from equating ‘being a monster’ with being ‘other’ on any axis that we already use to separate people, including but absolutely not limited to race, gender or gender representation, sexual preference or the lack thereof, socioeconomic class, immigration status, ethnicity, etc., etc., and truly ad nauseum.

Humans seem to actively search for axes on which they can divide themselves (all sharp puns equally intended) so they can class ‘others’ by any definition as ‘less than.’ So that their own group can be ‘more than.’ You might think that’s a digression but it’s NOT. The exploitation of this phenomenon is the heart of the story.

At least one of the hearts. It’s a monster, it has more than one.

At the same time – and very much the man, wizard, god, whatever behind the curtain – this is a story at the intersection of “God created mankind in his own image,” the reverse, which is that humanity creates gods in its own image, and the Yiddish proverb that goes, “Man plans and God laughs.”

Because this is where the story comes together in the literal sense, as the one and many deus ex machina (dei ex machina?) who have been maneuvering humanity and its monsters and monstrousness from behind the scenes on all the worlds of the multiverse. (We’re only closely observing two and it’s plenty to get the flavor of the mess they’re dealing with.)

If humanity creates gods in its own image, whether to explore the world, explain the world, excuse the way the world works or cope with the things it doesn’t understand, what would a god do with those same questions?

It might, and in this case it did, create gods and god-like beings in its own image to allow it to observe its world from a perspective outside its own. But the beings it creates would also be gods. Who would also want to create, cope with, and control, their own worlds and circumstances and destinies.

With humanity caught in the crossfire. And that is the other heart of this story, that conflict of purpose and explanation between gods. It’s not a conflict between good and evil per se, but a conflict between gods who believe that the universe that created them is a fascinating thing to explore, control and contain as much as they can, vs those that believe that the universe they can’t control is an enemy that must be destroyed.

The story in this concluding book in the trilogy reveals that all the sides of what could be a terrible equation have been manipulated by gods, the agents of the Cult of the Zsouvox who have created both the monsters in the human population and the movement that has demonized them in order to sow chaos and bring about destruction, while the smaller, quieter, Order of Asha opposes the Cult, moving their human agents as more-or-less willing pawns on their giant chessboard, trying to bring about a possibility that the universe, the Order, humanity, and the gods themselves, all survive. Together.

It’s a slim chance, but it’s the only one they’ve got.

Escape Rating B+: I picked this up for the purpose of listening to it. I could listen to Dion Graham read the worst book in the universe. An old phone book. All the grocery lists. Anything. There were points where I got so caught up in the voice that I was mesmerized – a definite danger as I listen while driving.

There are a LOT of threads to, not exactly unravel because things have already thoroughly unraveled, but ‘ravel’ in this concluding book. The two worlds that we are invested in – or rather we’re invested in the characters (AND WE ARE!) on two different versions of Earth are in the midst of trauma after trauma, and the pace hasn’t let up ever.

In the world most like ours, the Earth of No Gods, No Monsters – even though we now know there are PLENTY of both – the monsters who survived their “Boston Massacre” have found a slice of peace in a remote, intentional, sanctuary community supported by the Order of Asha. A sanctuary that is about to be breached by the Black Hand agents of the Cult of the Zsouvox. Their story is wrapped around questions of standing to defend what they’ve built or escaping to hide in yet another protected shadow in the hopes that they can outrun or outlive the Cult. A decision that is made for them by the Order of Asha informing them that they either stand here or lose the whole multiverse.

(This side of the story, about the risks, rewards and costs of constant activism no matter the cause, has a surprising readalike in We Will Rise Again with its collection of stories and essays that reckon with activism through both fiction and nonfiction, because damn but this is a fictional tour-de-force of the same told in a fascinating, multi-threaded story over multiple times and places and corners of the multiverse.)

The story in another corner of the multiverse, twenty-five years after their “Massacre of Men” by invading aliens aligned with the Cult of the Zsouvox whether they know it or not (honestly I’m not sure) is focused on the manipulators of their own world who see the crisis coming but are trying to fend it off in ways that more or less align with the Order of Asha. (This side of the story is directly related to the author’s first book, The Lesson. While I had enough to empathize with the characters and their dilemma from We Are the Crisis, I wasn’t quite as invested because I didn’t have enough background.)

All of that being said, this book, this series, is a lot. It’s beyond compelling because of the way that it’s using fantasy and science fiction to tell a story that’s really, paraphrasing the original, about human’s inhumanity to other humans. Because the real monsters are just us. The story does make me wonder if we can save ourselves without the intervention of one – or more – deus ex machina who can see us for what we are – because humans as a species have clearly got some problems with that.

By putting the story – just as the gods in this story put their own questions – into a scenario outside ourselves, it does what SF does when it’s at the top of its game. It holds up a mirror to society as it is to show both what is and what could be. And that’s what I’m taking away from this read.

However, I’m really glad that I have copies of all three books and audiobooks for this one. Because the way that the end turns itself around and explains or at least informs every single thing that has happened from the very beginning means that this fascinating and fantastic trilogy is going to be even better – and become a more cohesive and comprehensive story – on a second read/listen. Right after I read and/or listen to the author’s first book, The Lesson, now that I know it’s just a bit of a prequel – in other words, this Convergence Saga converges with that universe. I’m looking forward to starting over – at the beginning of the beginning – to see where it all leads now that I think I know all the players. That I’ll probably discover that I don’t is absolutely part of my fascination with this entire saga.

Originally published at Reading Reality
Profile Image for 2TReads.
917 reviews52 followers
November 24, 2025
Let's put aside the fact that this is a sprawling, huge, and encompassing piece of work that Turnbull has created.

What will always be profound and resonate with me is that this is about community. Whether it is a group that comes together out of love or fear or is formed in search of power, these are beings who want to be a part of something, who want connection. So inspite of all the magical beings that permeate this book and series, it is so very human.

Now to get back to the universe or should I say multiverse. A Ruin Great and Free is the culmination of learning about monsters amongst us, both natural and made monsters, gods, societies, time, space, and the multiverse. One would think it is a difficult read but Turnbull writes it with an ease and if you pay attention, you will not get lost and will thoroughly enjoy the connections being made.

We are going beyond the ones we have become familiar with and gain some insight into the shadowy and intriguing characters introduced peviously and I love that there still remains some mystery to this endeavour. This is a world that I won't mind returning to and you should too. It is fantastic, fun, intricate, intimate, and worth it.

And as always the smooth, deep timbre of Mr. Graham's voice truly makes this a pleasure to listen.

This is a review of the audiobook.

this is how you wrap up a fantastic series. Turnbull kept the core message of community through to the end, and I love that.
Profile Image for anya .
74 reviews1 follower
September 5, 2025
4.75 stars

This is one of those series that I immediately have trouble writing a synopsis for or even simply describing the premise of. There are just so many layers and complex storylines converging (haha) together. It's like a very delicious (and devastating) piece of baklava.

What I think truly floors me in every book in this series, including this conclusion, is the skill Cadwell Turnbull wields with flowing from one character POV to the next (although technically it's all one character's POV). The ability to write so many diverse characters with complex lives who all feel real and relatable and sympathetic despite their many flaws and bad decisions!! That is a level of skill that so very few authors possess.

This is also a book that forces you to pay attention to every detail. It doesn't hold your hand or underestimate your intelligence but it also isn't deliberately confusing or convoluted. From the very first book it's a rollercoaster ride during which you have to clutch onto the handles and not let go until it's over. In my opinion, the best way to read the series is to binge them all in one go because it's basically just one big book split in three in a way so few trilogies tend to be.

There are so many tropes and genres mixed in here (werewolves, vampires, cosmic gods, secret societies, monsters, aliens and alien technology that grants immortality, alternate realities, prophecies, cults, magic, co-ops and community politics, North American and USVI politics, revenge plots, body hopping, past lives, etc.) but somehow Turnbull makes all of them fit together in one big perfect cosmic horror thing. The ending was also simply perfect and I will be thinking about this story for a long time.

Thank you Blackstone Publishing and Netgalley for the eARC.

https://www.instagram.com/p/DOPIgffgS...
27 reviews
October 15, 2025
A Ruin Great and Free is the final installment in the Convergence Saga. The stakes in this installment are higher than ever before as the focus shifts onto the involvement of Gods and cosmic forces. The focus and plotting is very much a departure from the previous two novels, however, the strength of this book once again lies in the details and character moments.

Throughout this series we are introduced to a tremendous cast of characters, many of which remain mysterious. My favorite moments, and perhaps a strength of Turnbull's writing style, were the ones where we went on a journey through the backstory of one of the main characters. This installment takes us on many of those journeys, learning more about characters we've been following from the start.

I chose to read this series straight through, which I would recommend as the cast is very large and there are numerous character connections. I will admit that I likely missed details and nuances on the first read through, but I really appreciate the unique and powerful messaging of this series.

Thank you to Blackstone Publishing and Cadwell Turnbull for the copy of this book I received through Goodreads Giveaways!
57 reviews
November 4, 2025
I have truly enjoyed all the books of the Convergence Saga. I love Turnbull’s prose, his characters, his scope, and his world (universe?) building. This last one was a little hard for me though, entirely my fault to be sure. I could not remember the story so far or many of characters. Thankfully the ones I did remember were the ones largely central to this entry.
Suffice to say there is an absolute metric shit ton going on here and it’s compelling and a fitting end to the series.

For me patience and a willingness to reread passages and to flip back and forth between pages and chapters was essential. I also just let myself go along for the ride and it’s a good ride. I would suggest rereading the previous books to get the full impact of the conclusion. I know I’m going to have to do that myself at some point. I’m not quite ready to abandon these books and characters quite yet.

Overall reading this book reminded me of an interview with Ursula Le Guin where she said (something to the effect of) that science fiction writers aren’t really writing about an imagined future, they are writing about the present. To me, this seems an apt description of this book. It is always illuminating to see what smart, creative people have to say about a fraught present.

Profile Image for Maria Haskins.
Author 54 books141 followers
April 7, 2025
I don't know what I was expecting from this book, the last instalment in this sprawling, mindbending, multiverse-spanning saga, but I did not expect it to blow my mind in the very first chapter. A bold, audacious opening and from that point on, I could barely put it down.
All these lives and stories intertwining, all the monsters and humans, all the gods and mages, it all comes together for a profoundly moving conclusion I could not have predicted and which brought me to tears several times as I was reading. Turnbull writes about communities, about the way people are, together, the way they can help and destroy each other in equal measure, and he does it without ever losing sight of the power and importance of individual characters. This is a thrilling and profound conclusion to the Convergence Saga.
7 reviews
October 23, 2025
read the lesson first if you haven't already. it's a great story; you won't regret it. while the events of that book are explained in this one, but there's a fair bit of lore, so i could see some readers who were previously unfamiliar getting confused and bored by sections of the book that i found thrilling.

i love the characters and how well they're developed, love the language, love the elegant and illustrative things this book does with pov. i love the contrast of the cosmic scale of the conflict and the finite but fierce community caught in the middle of it all. deeply unwell about ridley gibson. god what a book
Profile Image for Laura Newsholme.
1,282 reviews8 followers
November 4, 2025
This was a good ending to what has been a pretty unique trilogy. There was a real sense of threat throughout, which I appreciated and some great character moments too, which is always welcome. My only criticism is that the ending felt a little bit lacklustre for me, given the levels of tension built up in the narrative. Other than that, I enjoyed this a lot and would definitely recommend the series as a whole.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review.
Profile Image for Jean.
487 reviews
December 26, 2025
I love this series and like how everything came together in this finale. It would be helpful to have also read "The Lesson" but not necessary. I'd also note that I liked this a bit better than #2 in the series (unsurprisingly, #1 was my favorite). If you've started the series, I'd highly recommend sticking with it, but I don't think this works as well as a standalone.
Profile Image for Ronnie.
685 reviews3 followers
January 6, 2026
The prose in these novels is phenomenal. I really love it. I also love the story. Except this, more than any other book in the trilogy (and this is a trilogy where all books warrent this to some degree) is one that I really do need to read again someday with my eyeballs.  There was a lot going on, and following along with audio was... Challenging for me. 
203 reviews1 follower
October 11, 2025
A solid conclusion to the trilogy. I found myself enjoying it but not excited about it, if that makes sense. It did everything it should have though and finally wrapped everything up. 3.5ish, rounded up to four.
Profile Image for Whitney Weinberg.
891 reviews10 followers
November 13, 2025
What an incredible end to a wonderful series.
This whole series has been such an interesting look in who belongs and how monsters are created and what is monster and this final book did the whole thing justice. Tied things together. It’s very intricate so I wouldn’t read it as a standalone.
Profile Image for Becky.
1,623 reviews83 followers
November 18, 2025
I planned a reread and then didn't do it, and I wish I had, in order to better follow all the threads, although I think honestly I wouldn't have fully followed all the cosmology either way, but I still loved it.
Profile Image for Jess.
2,343 reviews78 followers
September 14, 2025
The momentum seemed to slow down during the final wrap up but otherwise it's fast moving and fun (and hugely expansive multiverse cast of infinity).
Profile Image for Kate.
459 reviews6 followers
abandoned
October 1, 2025
DNF @ 45 pages. I really wanna finish this series. Except I don't really want to. I enjoy this series in theory a lot, but in reality I am too confused by it a lot of the time. Its too smart for me.
135 reviews1 follower
November 8, 2025
Amazing addition to a great series!! This one is a must have addition to my personal library!!!!
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