I’ve had mixed feelings on the Blood Debts series. Since I finished reading the first book, I’ve gone back and edited my rating (specifically on StoryGraph) to be a 3.75, but I still come back to the series whenever I can. I could attribute a lot of that to the drama, ballsy decisions made by each character, and a murder count that seems to only increase(yeah, this was definitely written by a GOT fan), but after reading two books and deciding to read I want to read the third one, too, I’m realizing I like them more than those initial surface-level reasons.
(And to those who saw my Blood Debts review, and read that I said that it sounded like Zachary’s narrator had a different mic, they fixed the audio this time!)
On the topic of POVs, they seemed to be structured better this time. I still think we could’ve done without Zachary’s POV, since it’s never been a huge part of the story and not only would we have arrived to the same conclusion about his dad but it would’ve been impactful only seeing Jack later on. But Valentina’s POV felt more necessary to her character instead of a reiteration of different plot points. She’s a messy, horrible person of course, but I liked seeing her reconcile with her mother, and the bits of her learning about her family history and heritage(and trying to connect with it). Damnit, why can’t she just try to be a normal teenager. She’s just HAS to manipulate an adult every Tuesday into giving her a one-up over Cris, huh.
Sofia was a character I wasn’t expecting to care about, but damn I kind of hope she has a couple POV chapters in the next book because she’s been wronged by both sides, and I don’t know how she’ll deal with that because she feels and processes anger a lot differently than Cris and Valentina do.
Coming back to anger, the way it was handled in this book was super interesting? The wording could be heavy-handed, but I liked the angle on Cris’s righteous anger and how peaceful resolution isn’t always an answer(or option), although for marginalized people(especially women of color), it’s always the expected choice. I even think Clem struggling sometimes to understand Cris’s decisions because of that works, too.
I’m still not the biggest fan of the side romances and how they’re paced. I think it’s just an issue I have with the author’s writing. Cris had a fling with Remi and although her nerves about falling in love are completely understandable because of the love spell fiasco last book, it was very repetitive about how “she didn’t want to be hurt again like with Oz”. But I could get behind Yves and Clem’s romance a bit more, now, even if I don’t think my feelings are ever going to change on their introduction and pacing in the first book. (That was probably because of the epilogue. Until then, I kept thinking Clem was being selfish about Yves.)
Another thing I didn’t like was some of the therapy language Clem and Cris would use to talk about themselves sometimes? Even though Clem sees a therapist regularly and narratively it makes sense, I still thought those parts were ways for the author to interject his own analysis of his characters into the narrative. (Which is something I could already gather! Terry J. Benton-Walker definitely knows his characters very well, which is something I’ll always note. I don’t know if I ever included this in my Blood Debts review, but he consistently never writes his characters making decisions that are out of line for them as people. Are they terrible decisions? A lot of the time. But are they out of character? No.)
Last thoughts: 1) I knew there was some political intrigue in the first book, but Valentina was playing manipulation/political chess the whole book, and that was…a lot more detailed than I expected for YA. Maybe even out of place. I will partially excuse it, though, because Game Of Thrones is a comp title. 2) Starting to think there’s a pattern in these books of there being a climax of questionable quality, but a solid ending.
In a couple ways, though, I thought this was a solid sequel and built off of the cliffhanger at the end of Blood Debts. I’m curious and nervous to see how the story will be wrapped up.
*****
pre-review:
purely for the amount of emotions I went through reading this, I think it deserves a 4 star rating from me. I am NOT going through that rollercoaster again unless someone bribes me with hundreds of dollars