Recommended: absolutely!!
If you've already read book one, WHOOO does book two absolutely step it up in plot and characters! And if you haven't read book one, you should jump into this series for overall hopeful explorations of connection in the face of oppression, and a bangin' cool magic to jump into
Thoughts:
It is rare that I read an active ongoing series, largely for the exact issue I had with this book: I completely forgot so much of what was going on! Books often set up some reminders of events and characters in the first few chapters of sequels, which this did, but it could have done a slightly better job reintroducing people, their relationships, and names. Multiple people have two or three names, and it was super confusing trying to remember that Elsa and Lark are the same, and Nightingale and Kiera and dolly are the same, and who the heck is this girl that I somehow forgot an entire character completely but I guess I also forgot Rye so maybe that's not a huge surprise.... Once I sorted it all out with context I got back into the flow, but it did make it hard for the first quarter of the book as I had to piece together not only the actions and events that had happened, but exactly who each person is to each other.
The plot and feeling of this is very much that of a middle-of-series book, in that a lot of this is active journeying from one place to another, from one plot stage to another. There's nothing wrong with that, and it was still engaging and tense while keeping the character development in here. There are a lot more partnerships and teams of people physically together in this one, versus in book one where they were largely isolated. It's nice to see them sharing spaces and getting to know each other in this new dimension as well.
The characters are, as always, SO dynamic. Many of them are not all good or all bad, and many situations are not all good or all bad. People who are abused act badly because of their trauma and internalized paranoia and such. There's a lot of empathy and support even when people are lashing out and causing genuine pain. There's forgiveness and vengeance, and there's mercy and violence. It's done in a way that explores which paths are right, and if there is even an answer to that or if every decision is contextual. Are "bad" things sometimes justified, or is there a hard line that is never worth crossing?
ALSO HOLY SHIT Y'ALL, the story absolutely kicks up. I didn't think there would be a way to raise the stakes even more than they already were considering the active rebellion and shootout at the end of book one, but HOT DAMN are things even more tense and potentially disastrous at an even bigger scale than we ever knew was possible in book one. Look how long this sentence was!! That's how crazy these new developments were!! And all in carefully built up, believable ways. There was one point at the start that felt very abrupt with some of these changes, but again, mostly because I had forgotten some of what happened in book one. If I had read this sooner after or re-read book one, it would have been much smoother and less jarring of a change. It would have been completely thrilling, to be honest, which it eventually was when I fully grasped the significance of what had been introduced.
As we get to know new groups of people, we learn new prejudices as well. In the main society of book one, it's men / women and no songlight / songlight as the primary dichotomies and power hierarchies. In book two, we meet groups that don't necessarily have those same prejudices, but have other issues that are slowly seen and acknowledged as also problems. It's an interesting push/pull of having hope of balance in one area, and dismay at imbalance in another area. It's a painful lesson, but an important one, and I can't wait to see how it plays out in book three.
So in short, YEAHHHHHHHHHHHHH I LOVE THIS SERIES SO MUCH!!!!! I am already so excited for book three. And now I know to do some re-reads before starting book three so I can fully remember and enjoy everything that's about to come!!
Thanks to BookSparks and the author for a free copy. This is my honest review!