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Deadly Ever After

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Two dead princesses must find true love's kiss to bring them back to life in this heart-stopping romantic fantasy debut. For fans of Cinderella Is Dead and Girl, Serpent, Thorn.

Amala has spent her whole life trying to be the perfect delicate, quiet, obedient. But when she’s murdered on the night of her wedding, her story is cut short before it begins. 

Kha’dasia has been told her whole life that she is too rough, too loud, too much. She’s no ordinary princess but a ruthless warrior on a quest to fulfill her late brother’s dying wish. Except she dies before reaching her destination.

When both girls wake up in a cursed forest, the gods offer them a second chance at life—if they can find true love’s kiss. But there’s a catch, the gods warn. While the right kiss will save you, the wrong kiss will kill you.

On their journey, the princesses must overcome challenges that force them to face the truth of their lives…and their deaths. And as Amala and Kha’dasia grow closer, they can’t help but wonder if true love has been standing right in front of them all along.

288 pages, Hardcover

First published November 4, 2025

41 people are currently reading
11151 people want to read

About the author

Brittany Johnson

2 books44 followers

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 104 reviews
Profile Image for jenny reads a lot.
703 reviews868 followers
November 5, 2025
Sapphic princesses on a quest?! Could this get any better?!

Deadly Ever After isn’t a book, it’s a dose of magical healing disguised as a fairytale adventure through a cursed forest, where two princesses find true loves kiss.

This book is thick with themes of healing, self-discovery, and identity exploration and it perfectly balances whimsy with darker themes. It screams, “you’re allowed to be you, no matter how sad, soft, angry - every version of you is valid and you are seen.” This is the book young Jenny needed and the book adult Jenny needed too.

is the perfect book for young audiences.

Whats to love…
- sapphic princesses
- a QUEST
- queer normative world
- dark yet whimsical
- fairytale vibes
- cursed forest setting
- perfectly paced
- opposites attract
- interesting world
- exploration of grief and healing from trauma

I loved every moment of being in The Garden and I cannot wait to read more by this author.

A note for my adult readers: this book is for ages 12+ and fits that age range well, the themes, complexity of world building, romance, prose, etc are all meant for young adults. If you’re looking for a healing YOUNG ADULT novel, look no further, but if you’re looking for an adult book mis-categorized as YA this is not it.

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Thank you Penguin Teen for the gifted book. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for April.
598 reviews177 followers
November 28, 2025
This one pulled me in from the very beginning. One thing I loved most was the character development. Both Amala and Kha’dasia had such powerful & emotional hurdles to cross, that made me adore them even more as the story unfolded. Their growth felt organic, heartfelt, and perfectly layered.

Let me just say, Queen Dominique & Calvin absolutely infuriated me! Every time they were mentioned, I felt my blood pressure rise 😂.

The audiobook narration was impeccable! The narrators delivered emotional depths to perfection. It enhanced every moment of tension, romance, and self discovery.

If you love YA romantasy, especially stories featuring arranged marriage tropes, this one should be added to your list. I really enjoyed these characters as they embarked on their journey of self discovery, identity, and connection. Thank you Penguin Teen, Brittany Johnson & Storygram Tours for a gifted physical copy! & Penguin Random House Audio for an ALC!
Profile Image for alyssa✨.
457 reviews475 followers
October 13, 2025
a cute quick read! i rlly enjoyed the concept and the setting it felt just like a fairytale. the romance was veryyyy instalovey but i still enjoyed myself
Profile Image for Kimmi.
224 reviews3 followers
October 28, 2025
Deadly Ever After by Brittany Johnson

I really enjoyed this quick and engaging story! I didn’t look too closely at the tropes beforehand, which let me get fully immersed in the world and I absolutely loved it.

Amala’s growth throughout the book was fantastic. I love when a female main character overcomes her struggles and truly evolves. Her childhood and the way her family treated her were absolutely heartbreaking, but watching her overcome that trauma was inspiring. By the end, she learns what real love looks and feels like, making this a truly wonderful story about healing and resilience.

Kha’dasia’s journey was powerful in a quieter way. Her story of grief and how she gradually opens herself to the world and to Amala, was touching and beautifully done. It shows that grief doesn’t look the same for everyone, but growth is always possible.

I definitely recommend this read to anyone who enjoys:
Queer romance
Strong female main characters
Fun twists
overcoming childhood trauma

Thank you NetGalley, PENGUIN GROUP Penguin Young Readers Group, G.P. Putnam's Sons Books for Young Readers, and PenguinCA for the ARC.

#DeadlyEverAfter #NetGalley
Profile Image for Keisha.
145 reviews20 followers
November 3, 2025
A fairytale. A Black fairytale. A Black sapphic fairytale. This is Deadly Ever After.

Two princesses. One murdered on her wedding night, the other dies on personal mission. They're given a second chance at life if they can fulfill the quest of finding true love's kiss. And the kiss must be true love because if it's not, they'll die instead.

It was entertaining reading the journey Amala and Kha'dasia had to go on and the obstacles they faced along the way. In beginning, they were leery and untrusting of one another. Of course, that changed along the way as they worked together, opened up to each other, and learned about the trauma they each carried around. Warnings for child abuse and grief.

Overall, an enjoyable read that I would recommend. Thank you to Netgalley and Penguin Group for this ARC.
Profile Image for Frank Chillura (OhYouRead).
1,685 reviews74 followers
December 7, 2025
Thank you to PRHAudio for my gifted ALC.

A sapphic fairy tale fantasy about two BIPOC girls with a diverse cast of characters written by a person of color? I have needed this since the moment I saw the cover reveal and what an incredible cover it is.

If Once Upon a Broken Heart and Cinderella is Dead had a baby, it would be this book. It’s full of fairy tale whimsy, a beautiful romance that started with a little knife to throat action (well sword and not exactly throat, but that’s not the point!), and a murder mystery that has to be solved… but it’s actually her own murder she’s solving.

Amala has had years of mental and physical abuse at the hands of her father. The only mother figure she ever knew was sent away (her hand-maiden) and her upcoming marriage is the only thing she has to look forward to. But on her wedding day she’s murdered.

Kha’dasia had a brother once. He was sick, but she wasn’t aware and before she knew it, he was gone. She’s runaway to get away from his memory, but then one night she goes to sleep feeling awful and wakes up dead. (Side note: the scene with her horse mourning her BROKE ME!!!!!!)

They both find themselves in a limbo of sorts. Or maybe their version of Heaven. It’s the home of the gods of their world. To be able to return home, they have to travel across the land and find true love’s kiss. If they kiss someone who isn’t their true love, they die. But if they find and kiss their true love, they can return back to their bodies and survive.

Along the way, they have to solve Amala’s murder, because if she returns to her body, the killer may try to finish the job they started.

Let me start by saying that I couldn’t help imagining the gods as Oprah Winfrey, Reese Witherspoon, and Mindy Khaling from A Wrinkle in Time. I know that it wasn’t supposed to be them, but that’s where my mind went.

I, of course, am Brittany Johnson’s biggest fan now. This read like a fairy tale, as I’m sure it was meant to, and I ate it up… word for WORD! I couldn’t stop reading until the end. Did I realize who the villain was long before Amala? Yes! We all did. But she’s a little dreamer and I love her for it.

I really want to go back and read it again immediately, tbh. It was that amazing!
Profile Image for aliyana ᥫ᭡.
112 reviews2 followers
June 1, 2025
thank you putnam & penguin teen for the ARC + me winning my first goodreads giveaway 🤭🫶🏾 this was an entertaining read, let’s go black sapphics 🙌🏾🩷!! love dual pov of unlikely characters forced to work with one another & then they end up falling in love at the end of it all :) & the fairytale backdrop & lush and ever-changing setting of The Garden didn’t hurt either! however…the writing style is just not for me. it read very juvenile like something straight from wattpad (which isn’t always a bad thing but), but that’s probably bc i’m not the target audience lol. the pacing was also pretty terrible but i did enjoy amala and kha’dasia’s character arcs—though i hate weak characters, so sorry amala. the romance between them was cute but cheesy & don’t even get me started on the laughable cliche ending. but like i said, this was entertaining has a clear message for younger readers!
Profile Image for ♡ A ♡.
732 reviews11 followers
July 15, 2025
Deadly Ever After follows Amala and Kha’dasia, two princesses who find themselves in a cursed forest and offered a second chance at life. Amala has spent her life being quiet and obedient and is about to free herself from her father by marrying Vincent, her true love, when she’s murdered. While Kha’dasia is the opposite—she’s loud and rough and on a mission fulfill her late brother’s dying wish. If they can make it through the forest alive and kiss their true love at the end, they’ll be free, but if they kiss the wrong person, they’ll die.

This was such a lovely debut!! This reads like a fairytale and has a beautiful message of empowering girls and I thoroughly enjoyed the narrative and discussions brought up. The world building was great for such a short book. It was so easy to fly through although it was predictable. But it had lovely prose and atmosphere. I really loved the gods realm and the quest they went on. Especially with the twist to true love’s kiss. It was a really unique and exciting take on fairytales!

I love a good dual-pov book especially when it’s a romance. Seeing them both fall for each other was so sweet. Amala and Kha’dasia have such a wholesome romance that starts off rocky and is so satisfying to watch them fall. I loved their ending. Both girls go through such good growth through the novel and I loved seeing where they started to where they ended. It felt very realistic and relatable and definitely inspiring for younger readers. I think is this such a good fairytale romantasy for teens!

If you love sapphic fantasy romances I’d definitely recommend checking this one out.

Thank you to Penguin Teen CA and Netgalley for the arc!
Profile Image for Karla.
444 reviews148 followers
November 26, 2025
Didn’t love this book as much as I thought I would.
This reads as "early" YA and felt juvenile at times…

I did like how much the author leaned into the fairytale aspect and how everything felt like a dream. I guess this is also this book’s downfall.
The character development was the strongest element of the book and the romance was really cute but I expected more intricate storylines and challenges. A lot of the characters and situations felt two-dimensional and I didn’t feel like we had a real resolution. I think this book frustrated me more than anything.

This book’s saving grace is the sapphic romance and representation. The main characters really complete each other and I feel like young queer Black girls need to know that they belong in this world and for this reason I’m not rating this book lower than three stars.
Profile Image for jala.reads.
6 reviews
July 20, 2025
Deadly Ever After took me on a journey I didn’t know I needed. It’s more than just a dark fairytale retelling it’s a story about identity, healing, and learning to love yourself after being told for so long that you’re “too much” or “not enough.

I related so deeply to Amala. Her quiet strength, her need to please, her fear of taking up space. I saw so much of myself in her. Watching her slowly find her voice and fight for her own story nearly brought me to tears. And then there’s Kha’dasia rough around the edges, full of fire, but hurting in ways she doesn’t always know how to express. They were complete opposites on the surface, but it became so clear that they needed each other to grow.

This story holds lessons on top of lessons about survival, self-worth, and redefining what “true love” really means. It was magical, romantic, and heavy in all the right ways. The cursed forest setting gave it an eerie, fairytale vibe, but the emotional depth? That’s what stayed with me the most.

Brittany Johnson gave us two layered, complex girls and let them be soft, angry, scared, brave, and in love. I can’t stop thinking about this book.

Huge thank you to NetGalley and Penguin Teen for the ARC! 💖
Profile Image for Micheala.
102 reviews4 followers
November 4, 2025
Thank you to Penguin Teen CA and NetGalley for the early copy. All thoughts are my own.

I've been looking forward to this since I heard about it and I really really enjoyed it. Having the main character die in the first chapter is a sure way to get me hooked. This was a quick read with a beautiful message and I highly recommend!

This had a fun quest with challenges and obstacles that needed overcoming. I really liked that both of our main characters learned and grew a lot. Amala spent her whole life trapped and forced to fit into the mold her father created for her and, after being murdered on the night of her wedding, she had to learn to trust and fight for herself. Watching her courage grow was both beautiful and inspiring. Kha'dasia had spent the last few years consumed and driven by grief. Her journey through that grief was heartbreaking and emotional and I spent a lot of time crying throughout it. I loved watching her face her grief and grow from it. Overall, this was a story of self-discovery and healing, and I feel like it was done very well.
Profile Image for Chloe.
797 reviews81 followers
July 21, 2025
This book is pure magic. The way it offers teenagers a space to confront their trauma, where they are forced to take the time to come to terms with themselves and their place in the world, deeply touched me. It allows both princesses to be soft, to be angry, and to be hurt. It is so unapologetic in healing and the discovery of your place in the world. I loved it so much.
Profile Image for KMart Vet.
1,540 reviews83 followers
November 17, 2025
This is the kind of story my younger self would’ve loved. Two princesses who die before their stories even begin and wake up in a cursed forest with a second chance, provided they can find true love's kiss.

What really made this shine for me was how proudly it centers diversity. There’s something incredibly affirming about seeing these girls take up space as the powerful heroes who get to choose their own destiny.

The opposites dynamic between Amala and Kha’dasia is lovely. Their journey has plenty of tenderness, frustration, and unspoken longing as they confront their past traumas and discover that maybe their quest isn't as straightforward as it seems. I adored how the story leans into self-worth, healing, and connection, and the sapphic romance adds that extra sparkle.

That said, this is very much a younger YA novel and that absolutely will work for its target audience. Younger readers are going to eat up the adventure, the emotional beats, and the deliciously dramatic fairytale atmosphere.

I do think the pacing stutters a little bit. The jumps felt abrupt at times, like we were racing from one challenge to the next before a scene could fully land. The ending, while satisfying, had that slightly predictable, rushed quality that made me wish the story had lingered just a little longer.

Still, this is a charming fairytale remix with big heart and healing vibes; the kind of book that feels like reclaiming the princess stories you grew up with and reshaping them into something more honest and empowering. It may be written for younger teens, but it holds a timeless softness that makes it easy to love.

Add to your TBR if you love:
👑Princesses save themselves
👑Healing journey, grief and family trauma
👑Opposites (Grumpy/Fierce and Naïve/Sunshine)
👑Modern Fairytale with Disney vibes
👑They're on a quest

Thank you to Penguin Teen, the author, and Storygram Tours for the complimentary review copy. This review is voluntary and all opinions are my own.
Profile Image for zoe belle ·ᴥ·.
42 reviews
January 1, 2026
FIRST RATING OF 2026!!! woooo wooo happy new year!!

this book was SUPER cute!! an original fairytale with a lot of fantasy and an AMAZING enemies to lovers story.

i love the contrast of amalas soft “damsel in distress” personality vs kha’dasias more hard “doesn’t need anyone to protect her” personality, and how by the end of the book we see amala very strong and protective and kha’dasia open to talking about her feelings and being vulnerable, I LOVE IT

one of my favorite parts of this book is how protective kha’dasia constantly is of amala, its SOOO cute. overall i think the yearning is soooo good and the chemistry of the characters is EVIDENT

i think this might be a niche thing to have really enjoyed about the book, but as someone (who did not grow up religious) in a queer relationship (with someone who did grow up religious) i love how this book handles kha’dasia sort of navigating amalas religious trauma and fear of god. they went about it in a very relatable and realistic way.

there’s also a lot of very beautiful and sad elements of navigating grief and lost loved ones, that’s a very big part of the story at least for kha’dasia, and the way it’s written is So heartbreaking especially since it’s a sibling dynamic

i think the end of the book was drawn out just a little, i think there could of been maybe 1 or 2 less battle/fight scenes that just felt excessive, and i think there could be more work on the world building and descriptions, but other than that i really really liked this book. it was funny and cute but also deep and heart wrenching and i just love gaybo princesses
Profile Image for cate (catescozycornerofbooks).
204 reviews52 followers
November 10, 2025
3.75 ⭐️

after amala and kha’dasia, two princesses from different kingdoms, end up dead, they are brought together in a unique form of the afterlife and sent on a journey to uncover their second chance at life — if only they can find true love’s kiss.

this sapphic romantasy was very creative and cute!!! i love a story with trials and there were so many in this one. so much of this book was about the characters coming to terms with the realities of their lives, in terms of events and also feelings. especially for amala, realizing love was not meant to be a situation where you settle for safe (*raises eyebrow iykyk*), but one where you’re lit on fire in the best way and made to feel alive. together, amala and kha’dasia brought out the best sides of each other and found the beautiful love they deserved.

while the end was satisfying, i felt it was rather predictable and also very rushed. in 20%, a lot was stuffed together to create a conclusion that just kind of left me feeling eh. additionally, there were definitely some points in the book that dragged and felt like they were filler to extend the scene.

overall, this was an enjoyable read and i loved my iconic sapphic princesses! for a debut fantasy, this was good work, and i look forward to seeing what brittany johnson does next!
Profile Image for Itzy Morales.
183 reviews2 followers
October 30, 2025
An entertaining and cutesy story with a great meaning!

We see how our two FMC’s have been hurt in the past by those they loved and trusted and how they must overcome that trauma by working together. Forced to work together, they peel layers back of each other in order to move forward with their quest. As they learn more about each other, a true friendship (and maybe even more) begins.

The way in which the quests were written felt too rushed and all over the place. I felt like we were jumping from one thing to another.

Also, Amala, girl, get over Vincent I beg!!! Every time I felt like we were getting somewhere she just had to bring up Vincent. *biggest eye roll known to man* Anyways, glad she came to her senses but I felt like it took way too long for her to get there.

Thank you to G. P. Putnam’s Sons Books for Young Readers and Penguin Random House for the ALC.
Profile Image for jj⛧.
168 reviews42 followers
July 27, 2025
I was so glad to receive an ARC for this book! The plot where one kiss can kill them and one will save them is so intriguing and definitely makes the reader want more. However, this story wasn't really my cup of tea.

Amala is finally getting married to the man of her dreams after spending her whole life compliant and quiet. That is until she gets murdered on her wedding night, leaving her with no happily ever after with her prince. Kha'dasia, other the other hand, is known for being too rough and aggressive. She is on a journey to fufill her dead brother's dying wish, but she dies before finishing. Both girls wake up in a whole new world and are given another chance at living if they find true love's kiss. However, one kiss will save them while the other kill them. Throughout their journey, the girls grow closer together and face multiple challenges that make them both realize how strong they are.. together.

LOVED✦ˑ ִֶ 𓂃⊹
• All the obstacles that Amala and Kha'dasia gothrough that brought them together was so endearing. It really strengthened their relationship and made them both realize how much they underestimated the other. They bonded, vented, and had great character arcs that made the book more enjoyable.
• Enemies to lovers is one of my favorite tropes and the way it was carried out through this book was smooth and practical. Both girls misjudged each other, which set them off on the wrong foot, but while they were forced to stay together they recognized how much they had in common.
NOT QUITE LOVED✦ˑ ִֶ 𓂃⊹
• The timing throughout the girls' travels felt very off. The pacing of how long night and day didn't quite add up. In the beginning, the author makes it seems as if they have very little time to find true love but during most of the book they're lollygagging and barely getting anywhere.
• The ending felt very rushed. So much (I would say too muchh) happens all at once when they return to the real world and it makes it very difficult to understand a person's motive for doing certain actions.

If you're looking for a cheesy and cliche romantasy book to read I'd definitely recommend this one!Thank you so much Netgalley and Penguin Young Readers Group for accepting my request for an ARC in exchange for a honest review!

➷₊✧˚★★★꒱
Profile Image for Kristy B.  (SwaggerWaggon).
110 reviews5 followers
August 1, 2025
I'm a sucker for a sapphic romance and this one was top tier. It was just the perfect mix of fantasy, dark themes, and whimsy. I thoroughly enjoyed it from beginning to end. I also loved that the characters had range and went from unlovable, to lovable, and back again.

Thanks to Penguin publishers for this ARC!
Profile Image for Raaven💖.
875 reviews43 followers
November 24, 2025
Thank you to edelweiss and the publishers for this ARC in exchange for my honest review!!

This was a very cute book. It felt like an old school fairy tale. I liked our two MCs but there were a few faults I had.

The way that Kha’dasia just randomly switched on how she treated Amala. She’s snapping at her and being a bitch and after 1 day she’s treating her normally? It was so weird. This is also very much instalove. They have 5 days to complete their journey and find true love’s kiss. The will they won’t they with the kissing was getting annoying. Like one sentence would be “I want her but I can’t have her” and then “why does it matter?” And rinse and repeat. The back and forth is exhausting. Also, the last 20% of the book was so dramatic. Felt very much like an evil villain twirling a mustache and rubbing their hands together.

Besides that, this is an action packed adventure with two very different girls who fall in love. They both had hella emotional baggage and I’m glad they were able to heal. Grief and letting go is always so hard. But it’s good to find something to live for and people who matter to you. This was a solid debut book and even if there were hang ups I enjoyed the journey (literally) and I love a good fairy tale book. And with black girls it’s even better!
Profile Image for Melissa Chavoya.
35 reviews2 followers
April 6, 2025
“Loving others and allowing yourself to be loved is the strongest magic in the world.”

this debut novel is MAGIC! not only does it have all the fairytale/romance goodness you’d expect, but it’s funny, adventurous, and deep af. i am so excited for this book to make it into the hands of young readers especially, because so much of this story has the power to influence how they view themselves in the world. such a fun, emotional, beautiful journey - can’t wait for you all to experience it when this is released!!
894 reviews7 followers
Read
December 20, 2025
Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for an advanced reader copy

Deadly Ever After by Brittany Johnson is a first person dual-POV YA Sapphic romantic fantasy with strong fairy tale elements. Princess Amala is engaged to marry Prince Vincent, who will help her find the woman who raised her, Lady Naveah. But when she is killed on her wedding night, she is sent to the afterlife with one chance to come back to life. And her partner in all of this is Kha’dasia, a warrior who is running from her own past.

The book's themes delve into some heavier topics including parental abuse and a father having a lot of anger towards his daughter not being a son. All of it is handled well and in a way that is suitable for the lower end of the YA readership (about 13-15-ish). There is a smidge of implications of sexual content, but nothing I would call explicit and nothing I would say is beyond what a teenager would see on TV or hear in music on the radio.

Amala and Kha’dasia’s relationship takes time to build, in part because Amala is still sold on the idea of being married to Vincent and she wants to believe in him even when all the signs say she shouldn’t, which both mirrors the impact of abuse and compulsive heterosexuality. Kha’dasia is a lot more aware of her feelings a lot sooner but she also never pushes Amala. I liked how their relationship slowly built as it does feel like the hard-but-soft contrast while letting both girls be both hard and soft, princesses and warriors.

I really liked the care and attention given to Black hair and how soft the narration was around both girls by using flowers and softer imagery. It’s so important for young Black people to see themselves be framed in a variety of ways, and that includes as soft romantic Sapphics who save each other.

I would recommend this to fans of YA Sapphic fantasy and readers of Sapphic fantasy who love fairy tales
Profile Image for Anne Fiewig.
127 reviews6 followers
October 23, 2025
adventurous, challenging, emotional, hopeful, inspiring, reflective, sad, funny, medium-paced

Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

Thank you so much to Penguin Teen for sending me an ARC for an honest review.
Deadly Ever After was such a spectacular journey. I loved adventuring though the garden with Kha'dasia and Amala. Both of these young women brought so much to the plate and I'm so proud of the growth they both experienced. I found myself relating to Amala more so than Kha'dasia but rooting for both of them from the start.
Amala's ability to keep her heart on her sleeve despite so much trauma from her past is such a comfort. She finds her strength through her kindness and I found that so admirable. Kha' dasia's tough exterior just made her heart of gold that much better. She was what every young woman hopes to be: strong, loyal and beautiful. I did get frustrated with her stubbornness but it helped guide the story along.
I did find the ending of the book to be drawn out with also putting a LOT of major pieces together. It just felt a little chaotic but ultimately it didn't play any take aways from my reading experience.
If you are a fan of Tangled, Snow White, strong princesses, women warriors, mischievous gods and sword fights, this is the book for you!
Thank you so much to Penguin Teen for sending it my way!

CONTENT WARNINGS
Graphic: Death, Emotional abuse, Violence, Blood, Murder, Injury/Injury detail
Moderate: Child abuse, Physical abuse
Profile Image for Michelle.
627 reviews11 followers
September 12, 2025
Thank you to NetGalley, Brittany Johnson, and G.P. Putnam's Sons Books for Young Readers for the e-arc in exchange for an honest review.

4.25 stars

Sapphic princesses turning from reluctant allies to lovers? I mean, say less. We all knew I was going to request this one. Overall, this was an enjoyable read. Please be aware that the novel contains darker themes. I felt like Brittany Johnson handled them with care. The way the characters reacted to these conversations and realizations felt realistic. I appreciate that fact. I found the world to be interesting and uniquely written. My one complaint is that the novel felt, at times, like it was explaining rather than showing. I understand it's a YA novel, but sometimes it felt like it was written for an even younger audience. Other than that, this is a great debut novel. I loved how Deadly Ever After was written for girls who have been judged and disregarded for their softer hearts. I would recommend this book!
Profile Image for rose ✨.
349 reviews164 followers
November 1, 2025
“the right kiss will save you. the wrong kiss will kill you.”


deadly ever after is the story of two dead princesses. amala is murdered on her wedding night; kha’dasia dies on a quest to fulfill her brother’s dying wish. both awaken in the garden, a magical realm where the gods offer them a second chance at life—if they can find true love’s kiss.

a sweet, opposites-attract romantasy about two sapphic princesses on a quest, deadly ever after is perfect for young fantasy readers. the romance between amala and kha’dasia is cute, if very instalovey, but their growth as individuals was the highlight of the novel for me. it’s a story about healing and learning to love yourself told in a format that is very accessible to YA readers.

i received an ARC from the publisher via netgalley in exchange for an honest review.

rating: 3.0/5.0 stars
Profile Image for Jamie (TheRebelliousReader).
6,894 reviews30 followers
November 5, 2025
4 stars. This was really good, I wasn’t crazy about the ending as I felt it got a bit convoluted and the bad guys were a bit hammy but before that what a ride! The writing is solid for it to be a debut and the plot was different and had me intrigued from page one. I really liked both of our leads Amala and Kha’dasia a lot. Both princesses who have died and are in a haunted forest with an opportunity to live again. I found their journey to be fascinating and often times heartbreaking. Great character development for both girls. The romance moves fast but I didn’t really mind because time was of the essence and they were all each other had so I get it. With a stronger ending this could’ve been a five star for me but for what it is I thought this was great and I look forward to seeing what Johnson does next.
Profile Image for Ellanet456.
96 reviews2 followers
December 6, 2025
I wanted to give this book a five so bad,because HELLO?? Two dark skin fmcs, black characters and kingdoms like this is really my dream. but I fear we will have to settle for a 3.5, the plot was pretty solid and the characters were ok but sometimes it felt like the writing intentionally dumbed them down for some parts of the plot to work, and sometimes the tone of the plot dead ass does a 180 degree flip from nowhere which is a bit jarring but not necessarily a bad thing, the dialogue of the characters felt very different from each other and inconsistent throughout but I just decided to chalk it up to them being from different places. the story and the message itself was incredibly heart touching though so I am giving it a five star rating in spirit.
Profile Image for Reading_seas0n .
1,100 reviews20 followers
November 6, 2025
3.5 stars
TW: Abuse, murder, fear, pain, betrayal, death of a loved one and neglect.

Two girls that are ruled by the grief and fear in their lives, are offered a second chance at life and must journey together to win it!
The limbo world we are in was very unique when it come to certain trials. The journey helped both FMC's grow into themselves and learn from their weakness; Amara, her father shaping her into a meek and abused girl, and Kha’dasia, learning to forgive and opening up to others.

I wish there had been like 100 more pages of them falling in love as I loved them going from enemies to friends to lovers.
Profile Image for Eros Rose.
329 reviews9 followers
November 4, 2025
“You do know true love is reserved for stories, right? This is real life.”

If you are looking for a young adult “fairy tale” novel with queer princesses, princes, kingdoms & fantastical elements then this is the book for you.

I had such a good time with this book.
The chemistry between the FMCs were witty, sweet, chaotic, dramatic & much more.
This could easily be a movie.
The storyline was captivating.
The writing style was descriptive.


I wish I had a book with Black sapphic representation like this when I was growing up. This was a very cute and easy read.
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