﹙ two stars ﹚
ignore the rating and my whole review this was the book that got me out of my slump lol
— overall thoughts
dragon marked at its core is about redemption, forgiveness, and healing—for both merrill and katya. when they meet, they are both hurt and haunted by their pasts, and are offered a chance to make amends together. even as danger dogs their steps and they face a daunting foe, an inevitable trust and undeniable devotion starts to grow between them.
i love books about mates. i don’t care that it’s pretty much insta-love; i don’t care that sometimes it forgoes the relationship development that i adore and crave in every romance. something about mates just scratches the feral part of my brain that needs them to love each other so much they will do anything for each other. so going into dragon marked, i already knew the romance would hit for me.
and i think that’s maybe the only thing that did.
— the history
and there is a lot of it. i have known about donna grant and her dragon books for a very long time. and yet i have never read donna grant or any of her dragon books until now—the ninth book in, i think, the fourth or fifth inter-connected series that she has. not a great choice! alas, here we are.
i get that it is on me that i don’t know a lot of the history here. but not knowing the intricate backstories diminished my enjoyment of the side character relationships and the overall plot. the first 40-50% of this book feels like just exposition. we are told exactly how katya and merrill got to their emotional low points; we are told what i feel like is a whole series-worth of backstory regarding how the dragons came to be on zora and slew of history as to what has happened to them here so far; we are told why the villain villette is the villain and also what she has done. basically, we are told a lot of things.
and yet i was still confused. and even worse: i am not sure if my confusion is just because i don’t have a lot of the backstory or if it actually just doesn’t make sense, logically. but i will give it the benefit of the doubt, because again, i get it, it’s on me.
i will say though—if you just want to read for the romance, then go for it. but if plot inconsistencies and uncertain characterizations and questionable choices will bother you, read at least some of the books before this one.
— mates mates mates
the thing i liked most about this book was the relationship development—grant does not take the easy mate route of insta-love. that interest and attraction is there initially, of course, but what i really appreciated (and where the full two stars of this rating comes from) are the conversations that merrill and katya had to get to know each other’s pain. it built genuine care and an understandable bond between the two of them. they both so desperately needed someone, but didn’t know how to ask for help. and with each other, they never had to ask.
some of the conversations were tied up in the exposition, and there was a point where i felt it got a little repetitive, but never egregiously, and then the plot got rolling and there was action and more concrete problems for them to deal with which spurred the romance, so i got over it.
it was a short book, so i can’t say that it didn’t move fast. however, there was solid growth there, and i appreciate that.
— final notes
there were a few shining moments in dragon marked, but for me, it was just muddled in too much history that i didn’t fully understand the gravity of, and character choices and some plotlines that just didn’t land for me. the parts of this book i enjoyed the most were when merrill and katya’s relationship was put in the spotlight, whether on a quiet rainy evening when they were opening up to each other, or when their bond was the reason they got out of perilous situations. and yet these brief moments were never quite able to outshine all my other hesitations, and thus, once again, here we are.
— thank you to donna grant and the publisher for the e-arc via netgalley to review!