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Carrion Saints

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“Now reach back,” she said, “and tear off your wings.”

Carrion Saints is a sapphic enemies-to-lovers romance between an immortal saint and a severed head.

Crow can pass for human. She may come off as eccentric, but she’s good at hiding her wings. As a saint, she’s devoted her endless life to protecting humanity from other immortals: the ones they call monsters. She’s finally ready to take on the worst monster of all, a great evil sealed at the edge of civilization.

Magnolia is the worst monster of all. A villain who amuses herself by preying on valiant heroes. At first glance, she looks powerless. She looks, in fact, like a decapitated head (a very chatty one). But her magic lets her issue absolute commands to humans and immortals alike. She’s been waiting centuries for a challenger powerful enough to break the seal binding her in the wilderness. In other words, she’s been waiting centuries to magically seize control over someone like Crow.

Crow has always been patient and forgiving. Sadistic, remorseless Magnolia awakens new depths of loathing in her—a hatred of frightening intensity. And now, she's forced to use her full power to grant Magnolia’s one heartfelt wish: to see the rest of the world. To make up for all the years she spent trapped alone with only trees for company.

What follows is an ultra slow-burn romance between true enemies. Between good and evil. Between a winged woman and a talkative severed head (who occasionally sprouts the rest of her body, just to keep things lively). They travel together across a post-apocalyptic landscape marked by strange magic and scattered human settlements. Yet the apocalypse happened a long time ago, and eons will pass before their gradually fading world dies for good.

In the meantime, these immortals are stuck with each other. Even a saint and a monstrous villain might eventually fall in love—but the path there will be dark, crooked, and sometimes surprisingly cozy.

This standalone fantasy novel can be read without prior knowledge of the author’s other work.

589 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 2, 2025

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About the author

Hiyodori

11 books294 followers
Hiyodori is not a bird. But she is dearly fond of her namesake, a plain-looking brown-gray bird that likes to perch near her Tokyo apartment and unleash the most incredible primal screams. Hiyodori (the human author) loves stories with fantastical settings and complicated, difficult-to-define relationships. All of her books—including Amity in the House of Her Enemy, her latest standalone novel—take place in the same shared fantasy universe.

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5 stars
101 (60%)
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47 (28%)
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13 (7%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 33 reviews
Profile Image for Mark Lawrence.
Author 88 books56.6k followers
Want to Read
April 25, 2026
This is a finalist in the SPFBO. If it wins, I'll definitely read it.

If not, I'll hope to, but I am a terribly slow reader.
Profile Image for AmEricaNo.
145 reviews4 followers
January 22, 2025
5/5

Funnily enough, Carrion Saints came out right as I was about to dig into The Reverse Healer Case Files . I didn’t want to put Clem and Wist on hold, but I love myself a good standalone novel. Carrion Saints is set in a dying world, and if anything is going to set the tone for a novel, the slow-death of existence is going to do it, along with immortal main characters who have far too much time on their hands to contemplate the nature of existence. Crow and Magnolia are not humans, and they don’t pretend to have human problems or human relationships. Carrion Saints is another intense Hiyodori enemies-to-lovers narrative, but it’s a different flavor of crooked than The First and Last Demon. Carrion Saints is more like a road trip with the coworker you really want to shove in a pit (or kill) whereas The First and Last Demon is like a bad break-up you need to exorcise with violence. But Carrion Saints is delicious in its own way and gloriously existential—a completely different take on the enemies-to-lovers dynamic that is just as captivating in some areas and exceeds in others.
Profile Image for Lukasz.
1,900 reviews489 followers
March 1, 2026
Carrion Saints opens after the end of the world. The great cities are gone, only small towns, quiet hills, and monsters remain.

Crow is an immortal saint who looks like a monster and sometimes acts like one. She has wings, red eyes, and the weary patience of someone who has watched empires rise, fall, and rebrand. She arrives in a small village with a local monster problem. The monster, known as the Woman in the Hills, lives under a large magnolia tree and eats hunters. This arrangement has been going on for some time. The villagers are not thrilled, exactly, but they’ve adjusted. Crow has already fought so called Great Adversaries and so she accepts to slay the monster. The confrontation doesn’t go as planned.

Magnolia is a chatty severed head attached to a tree. She finds the one crack in Crow and pries it open. The dynamic between them works incredibly well. Magnolia chatters, taunts, philosophizes while Crow mostly endures. Sometimes she pushes back, but sometimes she can’t. She also wants to do the least harm possible, but the story keeps forcing her into situations where harm is unavoidable.

I like Hiyodori’s writing, but sometimes I wish she condensed things more. There are long stretches of conversation between Crow and Magnolia that are conceptually interesting but start to circle the same ideas of power, choice, mortality, and what it means to be a saint. The philosophical back-and-forth feels overextended.

The worldbuilding is intriguing but not fully explored. We hear about the other Great Adversaries, the long decline of the world, the strange ecology of monsters and saints. It’s compelling in outline, but much of it stays offstage. This keeps the story focused, which is good. It also makes the setting feel a touch abstract.

That said, the book makes two near-omnipotent beings arguing on a hill feel tense. Their conflict is about who understands the other’s weaknesses first. I’ll add that Magnolia is a great antagonist because she’s not frothing with rage. She’s amused. Curious. Almost affectionate in a warped way. Crow’s quiet fury and Magnolia’s gleeful prodding create a steady, uncomfortable tension.

Emotionally, the book feels heavy. It’s about grief that never quite fades. About living so long that loss becomes sediment. If the book has a weakness, it’s that its pace can feel flat in the middle. The stakes are clear, but the story sometimes pauses to explain things rather than letting events reveal them.

Overall, Carrion Saints is a strong Dark Fantasy that keeps things personal and intriguing throughout. It’s also my second book by Hiyodori and I’m becoming a fan.
Profile Image for Meredith.
339 reviews8 followers
March 7, 2025
I don't think i've read anything quite like this. The slow burn and build up was so worth it
Everything about this from the countless monologues/philosophical discussions Magnolia and Crow had to the adventures they took throughout multiple towns and landscapes were something i fell in love with.
It's not a conventional romance by any means but that's to be expected with them being immortal, i just loved the idea of everything changing but not them. Felt very magical and it's having their own little bubble.
Also, the last parts were to die for!!! I love them so much. The writing just pulled everything together and was perfect.
5++ stars 🌟
Profile Image for Megan Russ.
Author 27 books116 followers
May 5, 2026
First read by Hiyodori.
I picked it up expecting some Eldritch horror elements along with a slow burn enemies to lovers.
We have the elements of an Eldritch horror story, but without any of the horror. We certainly have enemies that feel like enemies until they just don't. The end of the book took me for a loop. Honestly I think the story of Crow and the Spear-wielder would have been the story I wanted to read.
We pick up after the world has already 'ended' but it isn't the end. These immortals are going to ride this rock until it's gone.
I found it hard to relate to these characters, not only with them being immortals one of which is just a head. I also struggled to attach to the story, our main protagonist is under the antagonist control the whole time...until she wasn't and then went back anyway. This is the definition of Toxic relationship, it isn't love, it is codependency. That being said it was still a fun read. I just wouldn't call it a romance.
I enjoyed learning more about the world and the history of the characters. But some of the stuff I would have liked more of was glossed over. Like their journey at the end.
I really struggled with this review and the rating. I'm giving it 3.5, and I think I will be checking out more of Hiyodori's main series, maybe this standalone was just too compact for me.
Profile Image for SeasaltRose.
191 reviews14 followers
February 24, 2026
This book is probably going to be in my top ten reads this year! The worldbuilding is stunning, the characters are delightful (complex and firmly morally grey), and I really just love the classic fantasy vibes of going around visiting different towns and doing “side quests”.

The book is split into six parts and we follow our main characters, Crow and Magnolia, during these six adventures/episodes as they join up, explore the mysteries of their world, and learn to care about each other. Many of the parts about being an immortal reminded me of the show Frieren even though it was written before the show debut.

I do have one nitpick though. This book is described as standalone. One of the six parts of the book is majorly concerned with (I assume) a character from the authors other novels. It was slightly annoying to have to get through that part of the book missing an extreme amount of context for many of Magnolias conversations with this character. I’d still consider this book a standalone but with a huge caveat that it’s obviously still set in a shared world with shared characters that don’t resign themselves to background cameos.
Profile Image for Sarah.
689 reviews10 followers
December 14, 2025
This book showed up on a rec list I saw somewhere and when I saw that the romance involved one character who was just a severed head I knew I'd have to check it out. I haven't read any of this author's other books, but it works well enough as a standalone (though the crossover character probably hits harder if you know who she is).

The world was interesting, the character interactions were fun, and I liked the thought put into what immortal morality at the end of the world would actually look like. I do think a few parts were a little too easy and I wish we had seen more of the wild conflicts that started between the characters in the lead up to the end, but overall I'm really happy with this book, and will definitely be checking out more works by Hiyodori.
Profile Image for platyrhyco.
97 reviews2 followers
February 6, 2025
my GOD i love hiyodori

reading this like hm sensing some frieren and elden ring inspo maybe

ANYWAYS ANYWAYS I LOVE THESE TWO. Magnolia and Crow are just AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA. I love their dynamic, Magnolia the cheeky yapper and Crow trying to straight-lace it...

I genuinely genuinely love real honest to god enemies who want to kill and maim each other throughout the book. That is, without some stupid misunderstanding motivating the hostility.

love the setting too, took a little bit to locate where exactly we were in the Wist&Clem world, and to place myself mentally but quite comfy!

also oml.. we weren't even like 100 pages in, we're given: "like she knew exactly how her bare wrist looked in the feathery outer rim of torchlight", and I just had to HOLD THAT in my BRAIN throughout the entire thing AAAAAAAAAA
Profile Image for tilda.
55 reviews21 followers
September 30, 2025
she makes you rip out your wings? that’s okay! attempt to murder her multiple times! no harm done!

an immortal winged monster-slaying saint and her immortal monstrous talkative severed head 😛😛
54 reviews3 followers
January 26, 2025
I feel that I have to start this review by pointing out that if this had been any other author, I never would’ve picked up this book. It is not my normal type of read, but I trust this author and have pretty much decided to read anything that they put out. and I’m glad I did, because even the standalone novels feel like they’re adding little pieces to a bigger puzzle. anyway, I didn’t love this book. I had difficulty relating to the main characters, which I guess makes sense all things considered. I also didn’t quite buy the romance, although there were definitely a few really good scenes in the back half of the book that made me come close. However, I do think this book was insanely well written, it flew by and I enjoyed reading it overall. I also think the world building was fantastic. in short, I didn’t think it was a bad book at all. it just wasn’t quite for me. I still don’t regret reading it though.
Profile Image for C_menasian.
292 reviews1 follower
March 5, 2026
4.5 stars, This is a fantasy romance that is so unlike anything else I have read. The world and magic were so interesting to read about and I’m so excited to read more in this world because it feels so unique like a breath of fresh air in the fantasy space. The romance in this was the perfect slow burn between an unlikely pair and by the end of the book I just wanted to scream about them. This book was a journey I never wanted to end and I don’t think I can recommend this enough to everyone.
Profile Image for Astrophel R.
336 reviews3 followers
May 16, 2025
I LOVE Hiyodori's writing style so much. It's like fantasy for litfic lovers.

I do think this book kind of feels like 6 novellas stitched together. Crow and Magnolia just kind of meander about and talk, but I loved it. I really love how a character will discover something in the modern day, and then we'll get a flash back later that shows signs that Crow just looked over at the time.
Profile Image for Critical Virgo.
144 reviews19 followers
March 9, 2026
I find myself very conflicted with this one. While it explores some complex themes and has some great philosophising and rumination about longevity, grief, compulsion, purpose, duty and the meaninglessness or meaningfulness of life, I didn't feel it stood up on its own as a story with a beginning, middle and end with a definitive end point. It's still extremely well written, wears its Nier and Nier: Automata inspiration on it sleeves (and was that a hint of Darker Than Black I glimpsed as well?), but I found the characters very hard to get invested in and the plot felt very meandering and aimless at points.

Crow is a saint, an immortal being who came into the world following a calamity that started the end of the world. She's come to slay the last Great Adversary, the Woman in the Hills, having defeated the other three. But she has a weakness that the Woman can exploit, and so the two go on a long road trip exploring the world, their animosity for one another, and how complex feelings develop during their various escapades. The Woman is also a decapitated human head (seems worth mentioning).

The book gives off a strong Nier vibe, since while this is set in the general universe of Hiyodori's work it's so far into the future as to be its own thing (much like Nier and Nier: Automata), though it's technically not the same universe timeline. The vignettes feel like side quests and while they do reveal character and the world is vividly described with great atmosphere, I felt there was a lack of overall direction to the story. With other Hiyodori works there's usually a clear character motive, goal and twist, and these felt much hazier this time around. It's great that the author is trying new things with new perspectives, but it just didn't grab me the same way the other books have.

Of course we get a cameo, this time from our beloved

There's also a LOT of new lore to dump (since we're so far removed from the present of Clem and Wist's time) and since Crow's voice is no way near as fun or compelling as Clem's, while it's very interesting, it was a bit of a chore to get through. Magnolia constantly talking and Crow speaking in internal monologue while a great way to show their connection and personality did make the writing feel quite uneven. The descriptions are also as overgrown as Magnolia's roots and it really slowed the pacing down, which didn't help when I wasn't clear where the story was going.

I also almost glossed over the trademark twist because I'd been so uninvested in Crow, I wasn't really paying attention and the set up felt weaker in comparison again to other books. Maybe I'm being unfair by doing this but it's just making me realise what I adore about the rest of the series and when certain pieces are missing it's more noticeable. Magnolia's mercurial whims were also hard to pin down but her final reflections made sense.

By no means is this a bad book in any way, for me it just strayed a bit too far from what I enjoy most about Hiyodori's work, and perhaps triggered an existential crisis that the Clem and Wist series and its standalones will just keep going and going with no definitive end, which is not something I want!

Personally, this is the weakest book for me and I would not recommend it as a first entry point, the character writing isn't as strong and I didn't find the plot as gripping, but many others seem to have enjoyed it being the first so your mileage may vary.
Profile Image for Susan.
1,288 reviews4 followers
November 30, 2025
Finished this yesterday. I read this one more slowly than I think I’ve read other Hiyodori works…not a criticism. It was kind of nice to have it last for more than one work week, and I read it primarily during lunches at work. Hiyodori writes primarily enemies to something more…actually I don’t think I’ve read a book of hers that followed a different trope - even established and committed Clem and Wist have managed to revisit being enemies more than once through their series. Confession: it’s not my favorite trope. I’m fine with it done well - Hiyodori does it very well - but I don’t go out of my way to read books just because they have that trope in them. And I struggled some with the beginning of this one. Fantasy or science fiction can allow for such inimical enmity and truly awful happenings in the name of enemies doing whatever they feel they need to do for the sake of whatever is guiding them, grounding them, or causing the enmity. I also struggled a bit with the characters, who seemed so similar to Wist and Clem - in particular Magnolia was so similar to Clem I kept expecting her to turn out to be Clem in some fantasy novel way that didn’t ultimately happen. But I also enjoyed the story. I enjoyed experiencing the world and the journey that these two take both physically and philosophically. Once I got past the stuff I struggled with at the beginning, I was able to settle in and just let the story unspool and go along with it. I was probably a bit like Crow…mostly okay with my life just moving onward and now and again jerked back to the fact that everything was not okay and could not continue as it was. I liked the way it wrapped up and I liked the way it tied into the rest of the Clem and Wist universe. It was actually a story I hadn’t consciously been aware I wanted (not for the specific characters, but for the part of the universe their story lets us explore).
Profile Image for Paula (lovebookscl).
425 reviews179 followers
June 26, 2025
Hiyodori nunca decepciona. Sin lugar a dudas la autora con la mejor fantasía épica y protagonistas sáficas que hay hoy y por siempre. Es que no sé cómo lo hace para crear mundos tan llamativos con personajes complejos y bien pensados. Siempre seré su fan y a la espera de cualquier libro que saque.

Este libro fue un viaje hermoso, un viaje al fin del mundo de una forma cozy y graciosa. Uno podría pensar que tener a 2 inmortales viajando por un mundo que está muriendo sería triste y desolador, pero no lo es. Se siente como una tranquila caminata al atardecer. Como dice la parte final del libro: una ruta escénica hacia el fin del mundo.

Y me encantó la dinámica de las protagonistas, su humor seco y directo, sus peleas de matrimonio que lleva casado 1000 años, sus grandes diferencias en moral y cómo se complementan a pesar de todo. Crow seria y con una mirada muchas veces en blanco y negro, y Magnolia con sus palabras ingeniosas y haciendo sus propias reglas.

“You’re selfish. You’re sadistic. And you never know when to shut up.”
“No one has ever known me as well as you.” Magnolia agreed.


Por último, apenas apareció “The Devil” sabía quién era, y chillé. Estaba en el suelo. Eso fue un regalo que no esperaba, saber realmente las consecuencias (para otros) de lo que hizo Wist. No daré detalles porque es un spoiler gigante. Amo que los libros de Hiyodori se conecten y aún así los puedes leer en cualquier orden. De todas formas, como fan, recomiendo comenzar con la saga de Clem & Wist, mi ship que nunca voy a superar, mis favoritas.

“That woman is devilish to the bone.”

Profile Image for Vervada.
704 reviews
August 20, 2025
Wow! This was extremely good! It's among my favourites of Hiyodori's alongside The Reverse Healer Case Files and The Forest at the Heart of Her Mage. I'm in awe of Hiyodori's worldbuilding skills; with every book in this shared universe the worldbuilding gets better and better and it was pretty great to begin with. So creative and immersive and beautiful and strange and unique. Crow and Magnolia were such compelling protagonists too. I loved them as separate individuals, but I also really liked their dynamic and the way they changed each other . They reminded me a little bit of Aziraphale and Crowley, another pair whose dynamic I very much enjoy. Their banter was really funny, but I also enjoyed it when their conversations would take a philosophical turn. The ending was very gratifying, it left me with a very nice feeling.

Hiyodori was already an auto-buy author for me and this book only cements that fact.
Profile Image for Jess.
2,379 reviews79 followers
June 20, 2025
Hiyodori takes an enemies-to-lovers morality chain on a leisurely roadtrip through a dying world. I appreciated how the characters really were enemies, the morality chain relationship really did not fit either of them comfortably, and the way their relationship changed ... no spoilers but it required them to challenge their instincts and their societal roles (this is me being snarky about 95% of so-called "dark romance").


“You wished I would trust you, against all reason,” she said at last. “You wished for the ability to crush my whole heart in your hand. You would hold it carefully, because once you crushed it, you would never be able to destroy it again. You would lovingly cultivate your potential to ruin me—and you would strive to preserve that potential for some unfathomable length of time. Till everything ends.”


She comments in the author's note that Frieren came out when she was mostly done writing this; I'm sharing this so when I say that the vibes are very Frieren coded, I don't mean that this is fan fiction. The severed head feels a lot more Undead Murder Farce.

Anyway, if you like thoughtful fantasy with slowly unfolding worldbuilding, a small cast of characters, romantic elements that are heavily focused on emotion, and are ok with some violence and body horror, this is for you.
Profile Image for Jess.
17 reviews
January 25, 2026
I almost DNF this book at the 25% mark. Not that it was bad, but because it seemed to meander and was such a slow burn. I was really itching for a fast paced action packed read at the time. I’m really glad I decided to stick with it. Journey before destination.

The book is wonderfully bleak and riddled with pockets of wry humor. This book takes you on a long journey with its characters. I found myself loving Magnolia, who knew a decapitated head would make me feel so much and sympathize with her? For someone who claims that she would never change, she does, probably much to her chagrin. I really love how Crow and Magnolia interact with each other. Such a slow burn and almost whimsical ride if you ignore the… slaughter lol.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Amelia L.
5 reviews
February 14, 2025
As always Hiyodori delivers a delicate and complicated love story set against the most sumptuous of world building. The sprawling universe she describes makes me feel as if I’ve been immersed in some kind of studio ghibli-esque dream, albeit more violent. The characters in this stand alone were perhaps a little harder to relate to than Clem & Wist, but I loved them all the same. I hope there might be more adventures in store for Crow and Magnolia
Profile Image for Shamim Sinnar.
28 reviews
March 10, 2025
Interesting, thought-provoking, entertaining. The main characters are immortals who, according to the story, don't really experience erotic desire, so this is not the usual enemies-to-lovers fantasy romance (if that's what you're looking for). It's more about the relationship between two beings who have very opposed philosophical viewpoints on how to interact with humans, and who, despite everything, begin to not want to annihilate each other.
Profile Image for Patricia.
553 reviews13 followers
August 16, 2025
I cannot believe I fell for Mag. She did to me exactly what she did to Crow and I cannot believe it! She's like a fungus, she grows on you. But the worst, I only realised it when that one scene with the pike happened. I was so taken aback and sad. But luckily Magnolia didn't hold onto it, so I tried not to be so sad. And that ending, waouh! Couldn't have spelled love better than that for these two.
453 reviews
October 4, 2025
I really enjoyed the additions to the world building in this story, the immortals, the long term effects of the vorpal holes and whatnot, the question of where in the multiverse we are. I enjoyed Crow very much but had a hard time warming up to Magnolia, though Magnolia was very funny and I liked her severed-head tree-creature monsterness very much. I think I just had a difficult time getting invested in their relationship. Very fun story though!
11 reviews
January 16, 2026
Very enjoyable. Crow and Magnolia were so interesting and different. Watching them interact and fight kept me locked in the whole time. I really loved the slower pace of their adventure, allowing them to focus on one another and how they felt. I also like the rumination of what romance meant to an immortal like Crow and how they ended up changing each other (literally in the case of their compulsions). This was my first read of Hiyodori’s but will definitely not be my last. Can’t wait to start The Lowest Healer and the Highest Mage!
Profile Image for Delilah Curley.
Author 4 books9 followers
May 31, 2025
A wonderful, thought provoking story.

It took me a little longer to finish than expected. It felt more like a long conversation about philosophies which is why it took me longer. I had to stop and actually think about the discussions. Which was great because I personal love that kinda stuff.
Profile Image for Grace.
1,024 reviews15 followers
January 19, 2025
3.5

just as good as hiyodoris other books but in this one i didn’t vibe with the two main characters as a couple and i preferred them as separate entities
Profile Image for gabbie.
152 reviews
May 15, 2025
like planting something bright inside you.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 33 reviews