Ninth House meets Legendborn in this thrilling first book in a dark academia fantasy series about a teen who’s willing to do anything to find her brother—even infiltrate a secret society full of monsters.
When August’s brother disappears before his sophomore semester, everyone thinks the stress of college got to him. But August knows her brother would never have left her voluntarily, especially not after their mother so recently went missing.
The only clue he left behind was a note telling her to stay safe and protect their remaining family. And after August is attacked by a ten-foot-tall creature with fur and claws, she realizes that her brother might be in more danger than she could have imagined.
Unfortunately for her, the only person with a connection to the mysterious creature is the bookish Virgil Hawthorne…and he knows about them because he is one. If he doesn’t find a partner to help control his true nature, he’ll lose his humanity and become a mindless beast—exactly what the secret society he’s grown up in would love to put down.
Virgil makes a proposition: August will join his society and partner with him, and in return, he’ll help her find her brother. And so August is plunged into a deadly competition to win one of the few coveted candidate spots, all while trying to accept a frightening reality: that monsters are real, and she has to learn to master them if she’s to have any hope of saving her brother.
Liselle Sambury is the Trinidadian-Canadian author of the Governor General’s Literary Awards Finalist, Blood Like Magic. Her work spans multiple genres, from fantasy to sci-fi, horror, and more. In her free time, she shares helpful tips for upcoming writers and details of her publishing journey through a YouTube channel dedicated to demystifying the sometimes complicated business of being an author.
I wanted to try Liselle Sambury for a while now and apparently I picked the longest book possible to finally do so. But the Legendborn meets Ninth House pitch was right up my alley and also quite accurate as it turns out. This book is actually very similar to Legendborn in my opinion: there's a black girl starting university and getting involved in campus secret societies that revolve around monsters and, possibly, the apocalypse. No King Arthur stuff in here, but if you're a fan of Legendborn you will probably like this book too.
17-year-old August Black is spiraling. Her mother disappeared without a trace and her brother goes missing some time after that too. She spends all the money from her unenthusiastic job on drinks and partying and, frankly, has no idea what she's doing. After a horrible night out and an attack by a terrifying creature she gets involved with Virgil Hawthorne and the society he's part of. Virgil promises to help her searching for her missing family members, but only if August joins him as his partner in a possibly lethal competition. Turns out that he is months away from turning into a human-killing monster and in dire need of a partner who binds to him and prevents him from losing his mind. Binding monsters is the whole deal of the society, but monster and master have to pass multiple challenges and tests first. August joins Virgil and the book then more or less only covers her way into the society. She's considered an outsider with no prior supernatural knowledge and she has a rough time to say the least. She's starting intense physical education, she's learning about the monsters and the history of the society and she's supposed to take normal university classes on top of it all. August is under a lot of pressure with the constant feeling of not being good enough and I thought her a very well-developed character. She's insecure about some things but still not ready to please anyone. She's blunt and snarky and she does take no shit from nobody. She might seem unlikable to other people, but I loved her, honestly. She has to deal with literally everything and still has such a strong voice. Virgil, a certified good boy, calm and academic, is a good match for her and they had a great dynamic. There is no romance (imagine that) and instead we get August settling into a new friend group and that was just lovely. I see romantic potential for the sequel, though.
I do have to say that the introduction to the society was a bit convoluted. There were multiple infodump passages and there are so many characters introduced all at once that it was kinda overwhelming. There were way too many side characters to really keep track of, but a few, like Corey or Margot, did stand out and were nice to read about. The different challenges weren't really my favorite either, because some kinda gave child birthday party games, like the corn maze or the egg hunt. The execution of the challenges was good and there often were intense moments with other competitors, but I just wish that the whole setup was different to begin with. The last few chapters were wild though, and I really liked how the old ways of the society were constantly questioned by August and Virgil. Let's just say that the society doesn't go out of its way to actually help the people who turn into monsters and that the system is also prone to corruption. I love it when the main character gets dragged into a supernatural world that's just not the solution to all problems, but complex and rather complicated in its own way.
The book didn't exactly drag, but it was still very long and I think that some scenes could have been cut to make the story a bit more compact. There is a lot of great commentary on all different kinds of topics in here (body image, performance pressure, academic privilege, black heritage) and I think that a shorter book would have highlighted these themes even more. I am interested in continuing in this series, but a sequel hasn't been officially announced yet and I also don't know how well this story will stay on my mind. For now I can call it a refreshing YA fantasy that doesn't rely on common tropes or romance but that still provides an intriguing plot and great characters.
Huge thanks to Netgalley and Simon and Schuster Children's Publishing / Margaret K. McElderry Books for providing a digital arc in exchange for an honest review.
This was not for me. I never thought a book could be a slow burn while doing massive amounts of info dumping, but here we are. The plot is too complicated and frankly, just weird. I was forcing myself to continue for awhile, until I gave up because life is too short to read books you don’t care for. DNF @20%.
Thank you to NetGalley and Margaret K. McElderry Books for the eARC. All opinions are mine.
Before his Sophomore year of University, August's brother, Jules, goes missing. The general consensus is that he was overwhelmed with school, and other things going on in his life, and decided to skip town.
August knows that is impossible. Jules has been her rock since their family fell apart, and he would never do that to her. Especially considering how upsetting it was when their mother disappeared. Their family spiraled from there.
August is one tough cookie though, and she doesn't care what anyone says. She will find Jules. He left behind a note, and although cryptic, she knows he is in trouble.
After a 10-foot tall creature, resembling a mix between a werewolf and a psychotic Easter Bunny, attacks her in the park, she realizes her brother might be in way more danger than she ever could have guessed.
Virgil Hawthorne, a bookish and mysterious boy she met after a night of partying a little too hard, could be the key she needs to get to the bottom of the creatures existence, and Jules whereabouts.
As it turns out, Virgil needs assistance with something as well, and he feels like August could be the answer. All she has to do is join the Secret Society he's a part of. The two strike a deal and set out to achieve both of their goals.
I love Liselle Sambury, and this is a great start to an all-new series for her. I am already anticipating the next book. I wouldn't say this was a perfect reading experience, but it definitely intrigued me and held my attention.
It's such a nice blend of SFF-concepts, and I loved the complexity of the 'magic' system, for lack of a better word. It's not really magic, but I'm not quite sure how to describe it. Whatever you want to call it, it's so interesting.
Additionally, this contains one of my favorite tropes, a competition, and I loved learning about the politics and factions within this Secret Society. I'm just hoping I don't forget all of the details by the time the 2nd-book releases.
Even though I enjoyed this quite a bit, I'm not sure I would want to reread it before picking up the sequel. It's a long one and that's quite a time commitment.
I sort of had this same thought before picking up the 2nd-book in the Blood Like Magic duology. However, if my memory serves me correctly, Sambury did such a sensational job opening up the 2nd book, refreshing the Readers memory without making it repetitive, that I truly had nothing to worry about.
I have a feeling this one is going to be the same. Either way, I'll be grabbing a copy of the sequel as soon as I possibly can.
Thank you to the publisher, Margaret K. McElderry Books, for providing me with a copy to read and review. If any of the following buzzwords sound intriguing to you, you need to pick this one up:
Monsters, dark SFF, Dark Academia and a competition trope.
Disclaimer: I am friends with the author but all opinions are my own!
The first in a series that has a satisfying conclusion to the main plot arc of the book and doesn't leave you hanging, but does leave you wanting more! I love to see that. A Mastery of Monsters is a fantasy dark academia following a girl who must join a secret society to find out what happened to her missing brother. It's a smart take on the genre that interrogates institutions who say they are about equality and inclusivity, and yet in practice fail to live up to that.
You should be aware that there is a LOT of world-building to digest in early parts of the book and it took me awhile to figure out the details of what exactly was going on. That said, I do think the payoff is worth it - this turns into an action-packed, twisty story with a deadly competition and a couple of mysteries at the center of it. Some things are revealed by the end, but we also get breadcrumbs of more to come. It's a fun and layered book that is pretty fast paced once you get into it. I will read on in the series! The audio narration is great, but if you struggle to differentiate a large cast of characters the physical book might be a helpful tool. I received a copy of this book for review, all opinions are my own.
A Mastery of Monsters by Liselle Sambury A Mastery of Monsters #1 Y(Y)A Fantasy NetGalley eARC Pub Date: July 29, 2025 Simon and Schuster Children's... Ages: 14+
Keeping to herself after her mother disappeared, August felt as if she only had her brother. Then one night, walking alone, August is attacked by a monster. Virgil, a boy she just met, comes to her aid, but a few days later, her brother disappears, leaving a note not to look for him. She refused to obey him.
Believing the monster that had attacked her might have something to do with her brother's disappearance, August finds Virgil to get his help. He was willing, but only if she would help him. He needed a partner to help control the monster inside of him, and the only way to achieve this was if August won a competition. But if she fails, Virgil will end up a permanent monster imprisoned below ground, and, if she lives, she won't know what happened to her brother.
Even with the action that grabbed my attention at the beginning of this book, it was a slow read! Most of the issue was with the writing... For young adults, either in or about to start college, they talked like tweens, which makes me think it's aimed at middle school students. But August's 'acceptance' of the monsters was too easy. ('OMG! a monster is chasing me, run....' Next day.... 'There's monsters, okay...')
But I can say that as the story progressed, the writing and the characters matured. This was one of those books that I got lucky pushing through instead of DNFing.
I didn't care much for August. She was a typical trauma-suffering teenager, but flat. Giving her background earlier, those things she did before her mom disappeared would have given her some depth; instead, she was just there with an uncaring attitude. But the side characters had more depth and character than August. Virgil was kind of the same, but his backstory was presented at a time that gave him 'credibility'. He should have been a MC, because he needed the help, but he didn't have a big part in this story. The minor characters had more page time than him.
As for the story, it was a decent idea, though it reminded me a lot of other 'game trope' type books. A deeper dive into the 'society(s)' is needed because those are the backbone of these 'games' and the monsters. Sure, there was some, but not a deep enough dive to allow the reader to feel a part of them. But the 'game' part of the story, (think HP), I didn't care for. Yes, you need a way to get the best of the best, but I just felt there could have been a better/different way to go about it.
The title was what grabbed my attention, and while it lines up with the story, it made me expect more monsters, magic, and 'control' of said monsters. The cover is cool, but really has nothing to do with the story. I noticed no finches in it, but the knives had a role.
While there is some romance, it isn't graphic, but there is violence, thus making it suitable for readers fourteen and older.
This is the first book of the series, and, yeah, I'm a little interested in finding out what happens, but I won't be adding the next one to my TBR, though, if I stumble across it, I might grab it if I can get it on the cheap.
🥵: Spice: 🚫 Potential Triggers: **check authors page/socials for full list.
Short Synopsis: Augustus is living life, navigating her grief and not making the best choices. When her brother disappears under mysterious circumstances, she finds herself engaged with a secret society of monsters and the people who mastered them.
General Thoughts: I had a very mixed experience with this book. It is extremely dense and world building heavy. Which at times I really appreciated, and other times was just so much that it became confusing. Trying to keep the two separate secret societies straight as well as their overlapping rules and regulations got a little heavy at times. The length of the book was also extremely daunting and I felt like it could've been cut down without so much heavy info dumping at times.
However, the characters were extremely well done. They were interesting and well developed. I was interested in all of the different characters that were involved and their parts in the story. August was an extremely complicated and layered character that I felt had a lot going for her and kept me intrigued in the story.
The mysteries surrounding the plot line was also extremely engaging. It definitely kept me going and reading even during times of dense info dumping a world building that otherwise kind of made my mind wander. I am hoping since this book was so heavy concerning world building that the second book will focus more on plot and character development.
I really enjoyed the parallels between the themes in the book and current times today. I felt like they were utilized well and added air of relatability to the novel.
Overall, I enjoyed Moore than I didn't. I fully believe I will continue on with the Neurology because I have to see what happens.
Disclaimer: I read this book as a eARC from the publisher and NetGalley. All opinions are my own. This is my honest and voluntary review.
A Mastery of Monsters by Liselle Sambury ARC from Simon and Scuster Canada Release date: June 3rd 2025
-The authors note hit bro I needed to hear that 🥹 -this being based in Kingston ON period canadian rep we love it 🇨🇦 -omg i love Virgil he’s so cute and straight forward I like it -I love the monster and dark academia vibes its giving a little bit teen wolf and or shadow hunters tv show but make it academic if that makes sense -I love that Virgil gives nerdy teddy bear and August a badass black cat the contrast works beautifully I love their back and forth and forced proximity -the brother and mother mystery has me on my toes -I feel like I to am getting ready for the competition learning, training, grasping the concepts -Learning about this world, the monsters and Learners society is so cool -I love the diversity, black excellence rep I feel so seen its nice to see in a fantasy book -“Virgil has spent most of his life passively accepting his circumstances. But you, you make him fight.” -Virgil has been through so much my baby i love him so much 🥹 -August is so strong damn -the test / competition gives very much hunger games vibes im so invested my heart rate is upppp -“You cannot achieve liberation within a system of bondage” -wow what an adventure what a thrill what a world this book was amazing truly a masterpiece Rating: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
"A YA dark academia fantasy in which a girl must join a secret society that may be responsible for the disappearance of her brother. To infiltrate their ranks, she agrees to team up with a boy who is only months away from becoming a flesh-eating monster—and in exchange, she has to win a deadly competition to master control of his monstrosity."
“Even as a monster, nothing is more dehumanizing than having someone decide they know everything about you because of what you look like.”
A Mastery of Monsters is my third book by Liselle Sambury. While I still prefer her Blood Like Magic duology a lot more, I feel that this series has a lot of potential with fleshed out characters, neurodivergent and plus-sized rep, and literal and metaphorical monsters.
This novel is compared to Legendborn and I do see a lot of similarities to it. August is our chosen one where she enters a secret society to search for her missing brother and learns that monsters exist. The society specialises in the bonding of master and monster, in which individuals turning into monsters forge a bond with a trusted partner to prevent them from losing their humanity. However, August must take part in a deadly competition as this bond must be earned. She also meets Virgil, a man on the verge of turning, who promises to search for her missing brother if she allies with him and participates in the trials to help him.
I see a lot of people hating August, but I will forever be an August defender. I think the people that are hating on August are missing the point since she’s intentionally written to be insufferable initially. I never hated August, even in the beginning. She has a lot of redeemable qualities especially with her devotion to her brother. Her anger and impulsiveness felt very justified to me where she’s unafraid of talking back to people that deserve it. I like that there’s a self awareness to her personality as well where she acknowledges how flawed she is, and knows when to recognize an ally or friend and realise when she’s messed up.
The relationship August and Virgil had has to be my favorite part of the novel! When it comes to love interests, Liselle never misses. Virgil is the sweetest cinnamon roll out there and I adore him so much. He balances out August’s spitfire personality so well and I love the faith he has in August every time. Hit Virgil up if you ever need a moral boost because the guy has the biggest heart out there, always putting everyone before himself even when he’s on the verge of losing his humanity. I ate up every scene August and Virgil were in. Their chemistry was so good and the banter was bantering. There were so many moments where I blushed and I loved seeing them gradually grow to care for one another, especially August who is always so closed off and acidic. I also loved that both of them were plus-sized and it made their connection to one another more meaningful and sweet.
The concept was really interesting where it was about individuals turning into literal monsters, but also explores the metaphorical connotation of what makes a monster and reflects the darker parts of society. Liselle doesn’t shy away from the harder societal themes in her novel, and it was interesting exploring the different factions within the society and the different political views they had in how they believe monsters should be treated. She also touches upon other themes throughout the novel that still feel relevant today.
This novel does feel very compacted at times with the many characters being introduced in the novel, so much so that I lost track of them as it went on. I only really remember Corey and Margot besides Virgil and August, and I hope that the sequel focuses more on building these four characters instead of adding more since I felt like the others didn’t feel as significant nor fleshed out, rather only there to make up numbers in the society and trials. It also took me a while to wrap my head around the world, which did feel convoluted and exposition heavy in the beginning. The execution of the trials could have been better as well as it didn’t necessarily feel the most creative or exciting and it also felt fillery in between trials. At almost 600 pages, I feel that a lot of things could have been condensed to get to the point quicker.
Overall, I think the world has a lot of potential and I think this was a decent start to the series even if I feel that Blood Like Magic was a lot better written. August and Virgil really carried this one for me and I cannot wait to see more of them in the sequel.
i received a digital review copy from the publisher as part of their influencer program. i am leaving this review voluntarily.
content warnings (provided on-page by author): death of a parent, death of a teenager, fatphobia, mentions of disordered eating, dismemberment, drug and alcohol use, violence/gore, suicide mention
when august’s brother disappears before his sophomore semester, everyone thinks the stress of college got to him. but august knows he’d never leave her of his own volition, especially since their mom went missing recently. the only clue he left behind was a note telling her to stay safe and protect their family. when she’s attacked by a ten-foot creatures with fur and claws, she realizes her brother is in more danger than she could’ve imagined. she traces the creature back to virgil hawthorne, who knows about the creature because he is one. he makes august a proposition: august will join his society and partner with him to help control his true nature, and he’ll help her find his brother. august is swept up into a world of monsters and plunged into a deadly competition all while trying to save her brother.
i’ve loved all of liselle sambury’s other books, so i was very eager to start this one! i was intrigued by the promises of an academic setting, deadly competition, and the mystery surrounding august’s brother, jules. these were all such interesting aspects, and i loved how sambury made these tropes her own. from the dedication through the epilogue, i was hooked. i’m glad this is just book one because i know sambury will do amazing things with the rest of the series. i can’t wait for book two!
Very much a slow burner with a whole mountain of lore...history and characters to lay out.
Feisty August has Monster problems.....and she virtually stumbles into a secret organisation (cult?)..that fights Monsters with their own Monster/Master combinations. August's Mother has gone missing and now her studious Brother had also disappeared....and she may have to make some difficult decisions to find them.
the real core of the book..is a series of trials that August has to go through to bond with bookish Virgil ..who happens to be a Monster.
3.75* Filled with action, twists and monstrous secrets, A Mastery of Monsters is another thrilling read from Liselle Sambury.
This is a very world-building heavy book and for the most part, it made for an atmospheric and vivid read but at times I did feel a little overwhelmed with information.
I throughly enjoyed the concept and the messages behind the story. I especially absolutely loved August’s relationship with her body felt it was beautifully explored. The characters were great and I hope we get to see a little more depth from the side characters in the next books!
This is a series I’d happily continue with and I have a feeling I’d enjoy this one even more upon a reread.
This one sort of falls between 3 and 3.5⭐ for but overall it's a hard one to rate. I can see where the Legendborn similarities come into play with the ~secret society~ and the black fmc involved in a larger plot she had no idea about, but something about this didn't really gel as well as that story did.
Starting with the things I liked: - I think the world building was dense which lends itself well to a series which this seems like it's headed towards. I can tell that there was a lot of thought behind the factions and the monsters, and the magic system more or less made sense when it was being introduced.
- I think the overall mystery was actually pretty good even if by the halfway point I had a list of suspects that proved to be correct. This book had a lot of political scheming and it was done well. Lots of layers and clearly there's going to be a lot to unpack.
- The action scenes were good and this definitely was one of the better YA stories featuring ~challenges. The stakes were actually high and people did die lol.
For the things I was meh about/didn't like:
- Honestly, it was hard to like any of the characters in this. August the fmc was rude and selfish and she only got marginally better by the end. I get that she had trauma which rightfully would've impacted the way she behaved but she wasn't the only one. Everyone in this story had backstory trauma but she gave too much main character energy and just did things without thinking of how it would affect other people. This was made worse because it was always someone that she needed help from to solve her own questions.
The only person I really liked in this was Virgil and that's not saying much when you think about how many named characters are in this story. A LOT. Margo, Corey, Riley, Henry, Adam, Caden, Virgil, Jules, Mya like? This isn't even ALL of the characters. It got to be a little much which leads me to my next issue..
- this book is entirely too long. I don't know that this needed to be 600 pages? Like, the pacing was good for the first half, but then it gets bogged down in the middle by a lot of nothing. It all ends up leading to a bigger picture but I felt like we could've gotten to the point quicker. By the end I was waiting for it to wrap up. I get that the mystery & politics were dense but I don't even feel like I completely understood the mechanics of those things by the end of this.
- This also tried to tackle too many ...real world adjacent issues in one book imo and most of them were starting to get a little too obvious. Parental abandonment, anarchy, racism, suicide, elitism, fatphobia...the list goes on. Some of them were TOO on the nose. Like the factions being: progressives, traditionalists, and pro-libs? I understand the points being made with this though but it just felt too real world adjacent for this to be a magical society.
In addition, this whole magical society maybe had too many parts involved. Like I said above I don't even think I'm 100% clear on how exactly this organization works and I would think that by the end of 600 pages that I should be? Not only that, there's like 2 (maybe 3 if you count the Pro-Libs) magical societies in this one book that you have to keep track of. Things definitely weren't even halfway clear until 300 pages in which imo is too many.
- Lastly, the romance I didn't really think added anything to this. It wasn't like hardcore in your face, but it's obviously there and I think August and the book had too much going on to add a romantic sub sub sub plot. Considering what we learn from this, I'm not even sure how that makes sense but I'll be tuning in for the following book(s).
I don't know. I didn't hate it, and I think if you enjoyed Legendborn you would like this (I did), but this sort of exhausted me to read. I will keep tuning in for the next book and hopefully things move quicker in part 2 after this set up book. The plots in this one are literally just getting started so at the very least the scheming will be good.
I received an arc from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. Thank you Simon and Schuster, Margaret K. McElderry Books, and NetGalley!
Mini Book Review: Thank you so much to Simon Teen for the complimentary copy of the book! I have been reading Liselle Sambury's books for awhile now and they have been hit or miss with me. This one started off really strong and I was really invested and then I just became confused. There was a lot happening and eventfully had gotten confused by all the characters. Everything that was included was important to the story but I don't know I feel like something could have been edited out and the story would not be compromised. I know this will be a series and the ending did make it seem like the next one will continue. I am not sure at this point if I will continue but perhaps I will give it a go.
I really like the creative liberties that Liselle does and all her books are so different. I would love to see what she could do in the adult space. I think she could really write the heck out of an adult horror book - maybe one day!
I paired my reading with the audio and Angel Pean was stellar! I always enjoy the books she narrator. Her tone is very relaxing and makes the listening very easy.
This was an ambitious YA fantasy with an epic quest and lots of world building. I liked that it was set in Canada but I honestly found it a bit long. The monster/master dichotomy of the magical system was a unique slavery-esque world where there was a lot of unjust power imbalances and one teen girl has to train to be a “master” in order to try to save/find her brother. It was well narrated by Angel Pean and I would recommend it to fans of the Legendborn series but overall it wasn’t for me/wasn’t my fav by this author.
Liselle Sambury's latest novel delivers a refreshing and incisive exploration of power, control, and identity within the framework of dark academia fantasy. A Mastery of Monsters follows August Black as she infiltrates a secret society to find her missing brother Jules, only to discover a world where monsters are real and those who claim to master them wield dangerous influence.
The Heart of the Story: August's Unflinching Journey
August Black emerges as a protagonist who refuses to be contained by anyone's expectations. Her voice carries the sharp wit and defensive cynicism of someone who has learned to protect herself through attitude and distance. When her brother disappears from Queen's University, August's investigation leads her into partnership with Virgil Hawthorne, a shapeshifter desperately seeking a "Master" to help him control his monstrous nature.
The partnership between August and Virgil forms the emotional core of the novel. Sambury skillfully develops their relationship from reluctant alliance to genuine partnership, avoiding easy romantic resolutions in favor of deeper questions about autonomy, loyalty, and what it means to truly know someone. August's fierce protectiveness and Virgil's quiet strength create a dynamic that feels both inevitable and hard-earned.
Monsters as Metaphor: The Society's Dark Truth
The Learners' Society operates as both literal organization and powerful metaphor for systems that promise protection while demanding submission. Sambury's world-building reveals a complex hierarchy where "monsters" must find human "Masters" to avoid losing their humanity entirely. This premise becomes increasingly unsettling as the novel progresses, raising uncomfortable questions about who truly holds power and who benefits from these arrangements.
The society's structure mirrors real-world institutions that perpetuate inequality while claiming noble purposes. The competition August enters ostensibly determines who deserves the privilege of partnership, but the process itself reveals the arbitrary nature of institutional power and the ways marginalized individuals are forced to compete for basic dignity.
Political Intrigue and Character Development
Sambury excels at weaving political complexity throughout the narrative without overwhelming the character-driven plot. The various factions within the society - Progressives, Traditionalists, Pro-Libs, and Scientists - each represent different approaches to the "monster problem," but none emerge as entirely virtuous. This nuanced portrayal prevents the novel from falling into simplistic good-versus-evil dynamics.
The revelation about August's brother Jules provides genuine shock while maintaining narrative logic. His transformation from protective older brother to unwilling monster forces both August and readers to confront the arbitrary nature of who becomes victim versus perpetrator within oppressive systems.
Sambury's Sharp Writing Style
The author's prose carries August's voice with remarkable consistency, blending teenage skepticism with genuine emotional vulnerability. Sambury has a particular talent for dialogue that reveals character - August's defensive quips, Virgil's careful politeness, and the various authority figures' coded language all feel authentic and purposeful.
The action sequences maintain clarity and momentum without sacrificing character development. The competition scenes, particularly the maze challenge and monster affinity tests, serve as more than mere plot devices - they reveal character motivations and force relationships to evolve under pressure.
Strengths and Minor Shortcomings
The novel's greatest strength lies in its refusal to provide easy answers. The society's claims about an approaching apocalypse remain ambiguous, forcing readers to question institutional narratives while acknowledging genuine threats. Sambury skillfully balances skepticism with the need for some form of collective action.
However, certain plot revelations feel slightly rushed in the final act. The truth about Bernie's manipulations and the broader conspiracy could have benefited from additional development earlier in the narrative. Additionally, some secondary characters, particularly within the various factions, occasionally blur together despite their different political positions.
Dark Academia Done Right
Unlike many dark academia novels that rely primarily on aesthetic atmosphere, A Mastery of Monsters grounds its academic setting in genuine institutional critique. Queen's University becomes more than backdrop - it represents the ways educational institutions can simultaneously offer opportunity and perpetuate exclusion.
The novel's exploration of who gets to attend university, under what conditions, and at what cost adds contemporary relevance to the fantasy elements. Virgil's dependence on August for basic educational access highlights how institutional barriers affect real lives in immediate ways.
Final Verdict
A Mastery of Monsters succeeds as both thrilling fantasy adventure and thoughtful examination of power structures. Sambury has crafted a novel that entertains while challenging readers to consider their own relationships with institutions that claim to protect while demanding submission.
The book establishes compelling groundwork for future installments while providing satisfying resolution to August's immediate journey. Most importantly, it demonstrates that the best fantasy literature can interrogate real-world problems through imaginative frameworks that make familiar issues visible in new ways.
This is dark academia that bites back against its own genre conventions, offering genuine political insight alongside supernatural thrills. Sambury continues to establish herself as a voice worth following in contemporary fantasy literature.
a fantasy dark academia world filled with monsters, secret societies, trials, and a murder mystery? sign me up! i absolutely devoured this book - it deserves way more hype!! such a refreshing read, and i think the legendborn comp is very fitting.
our fmc, august, is truly the heart of this book and i will forever defend her. she comes across as prickly and hard to like at first, but watching her character unfold is incredible. you understand that her walls exist because of her trauma, and seeing her growth is so satisfying.
don’t let the length of this book intimidate you. it reads so smoothly that you’ll fly through it, especially once you get past the initial worldbuilding. the lore is rich and the world sambury builds is genuinely immersive, though i’ll admit the first 30% feels a bit info-dumpy (i felt similarly about legendborn). but stick with it, because it all clicks into place once you’re invested.
this was my first liselle sambury book, and it definitely won’t be my last!
read if you like: 🗡️ secret societies 🗡️ he likes books, she likes knives 🗡️ partnership-of-convenience 🗡️ slow-burn 🗡️ monsters 🗡️ murder mystery 🗡️ deadly conspiracies & trials
“i promise that if you win, if you partner with me, i will do everything within my power to help find your brother. and it could never be a lie because i will need you, forever. but you have to save me.”
thank you simon teen for the gifted review copy! all opinions my own.
This book was too long to start out so boring. I immediately didn’t like the main character because teen partying (like excessive to the point of not remembering the night afterwards) doesn’t interest me. Also, a character with an extremely bleak backstory and no friends doesn’t interest me. Not my type of book.
“once you give one group power, the group that had power all along begin to feel threaten. they don’t see it as bringing the scales to balance, they see it as an attack that hasn’t happened yet”
Special thanks to the author & @simonteen #SimonTeenInfluencer for my gifted finished copy‼️
Let me just say I love Liselle Sambury so if she writes it I’m reading it. Book 1 of the Mastery of Monsters Trilogy brings readers a slow-burning dark academia fantasy novel filled with secrets, flesh-eating monsters, deadly attacks, missing people, found family, and a secret society skilled in mastering monsters to help during the apocalypse.
This initially started out super slow for me. I didn’t really get into the book until I was over 40-50% in. There was a lot of world building, learning about the society, and the history behind the monster mutations. At times this became a little overwhelming but it’s all important to the plot. There were also quite a few characters to keep track of which I didn’t like. But I loved the map we’re given in the beginning of the book that helps you easily visualize where everything is on and around the campus.
I love how the monsters were given this shapeshifting ability to appear as human until something triggers them to flip form. You could literally be standing next to one and not know it. But all monsters aren’t as bad as they seem. Watching Virgil and August’s friendship grow proved that. They had to build a sense of trust in order to work together and the more they learned from each other the stronger their monster/master bond would be. And although August had different intentions for joining the society Virgil was still willing to help find her brother even if that meant he’d be betrayed in the process. I also thought their ranking classifications were cool with the Bachelor and Master status.
Overall, I enjoyed this one the last 30% was the most action-packed. But the author gives us well-drawn characters, a bloody competition, a vengeful rivalry, sabotage, a chain of masters gone rogue, cannibalism, and some supernatural elements with a bit of suspense and mystery. If you’re a fan of the Legendborn series you might enjoy this book‼️
If Legendborn met Ninth House, with a touch of Immortal Dark, you'd get something close to A Mastery of Monsters.
What to expect: 🔮Secret societies 🩸Monsters bound to humans 👊A fierce (often messy) heroine 🖤Found family & dark alliances
Virgil, fully aware of the monster inside him, offers August a deal: join his society, partner with him, and he’ll help her find her missing brother.
And August? She’ll do anything to get her brother back, even if it means teaming up with a literal monster. She’s not always easy to root for - messy, self-destructive, and stubborn - but she fights. She’s raw, real, and unafraid to break the rules. I admired her grit.
The first half leans into worldbuilding. I appreciated having my Kindle handy to highlight all the political ideologies and faction affiliations because it was hard to keep straight on audio.
But the second half? That’s where the action really takes off. The deadly competition for one of the coveted candidate spots (roles that allow humans to bind with monsters) raises the stakes quickly.
Overall, a solid setup for book 2 with plenty of intrigue and shifting alliances.
🎧Narration Note: Angel Pean is fantastic, as always. She brings energy, fire, and a rebellious edge that fits August’s voice perfectly.
Final Verdict: 👍 Dark academia fantasy with found family vibes, dangerous alliances, and political intrigue. Just be ready for heavy worldbuilding up front and an FMC who isn't always likable.
A Mastery of Monsters is an action packed fantasy with Ninth House vibes, terrifying monsters, and a deadly competition that will have you on the edge of your seat and leave you wanting more!! I need book two NOW!
This is my first book by Liselle Sambury but it will NOT be my last. I adore the author's writing style that brings you right into the action and creates this great tension and mystery throughout the novel to keep you trying to figure out just what in the world is going on in the background of the competition.
I really enjoyed the theme of belonging that is addressed in the novel. Our main characters are all fighting some issue with belonging and it is so endearing to watch the group of misfits become their own found family and lean on each other as they grow to trust and love one another. Definitely had me tearing up a couple times.
I adore all the characters especially after their individual transformations that showed their growth as the novel continues. There is a special place in my heart for our heroine August! I admire her love for her family and friends and that she is willing to do anything for them. I also adore the friendship and closeness of August and Virgil. They are so adorable and the perfect pairing. Of course, the banter is hilarious!
I highly recommend A Mastery of Monsters to fans of Leigh Bardugo's Ninth House series, fans of dark academia, and/or any fans of deadly competitions.
This YA Fantasy broaches topics of racism and societal expectations on young women in a manner in which it is easily digestible and discussed by young teens. The author does a really good job not only with their conversational approach but also with framing the topics within the story.
There is alot of world building and political maneuvering involved in this first book, with only a very slight sub plot of romance, but I do feel the second book will be more romance focused. The political scheming involved within the secret society the main character is infiltrating combined with the high stakes trials she is forced into keep the pace pretty fast, making this a quick read despite the page count.
The audio narration is done really well. The personality she was able to give the FMC really enhanced the experience and had me laughing out loud numerous times.
I definitely recommend this one and I am excited for book two.
3.5 stars. The first 1/4 of this book I fought hard to not DNF. Then it got progressively better. Some elements of this book were fantastic: the overall idea and concept 5 stars, the exploration of heavier topics in a way that engaged the reader, well done. The intricate politics fantastic. At the end of the day the author got in her own way. The first part of the book instead of world building it was world shove down your throat. The writing style was difficult to connect with. This is dark academia, political intrigue, and a chaotic world of secret society. It was a fun ride and I feel with a chop of 50-100 pages it would have been a more impactful story. The cohesiveness was just missing. What was done well was superb and what missed the mark really missed the mark. Yet still somehow overall a decent story.
Thank you @simonteen @simon.audio #partner for the gifted copies of this book!
Dark academia and monsters? Say whaaaaa?! 🖤 A Mastery of Monsters delivered on the this highly tense and wild adventure that I did not want to put down. Did I mention there are Monsters?! Muahahahaha. Loved them! The creatures were so well done and honestly one of my favorites part of the whole book.
This one is a bit of a chonker (be prepared!), and while I do think it could’ve been trimmed down just a touch, the ride was still totally worth it. The concept was super cool...characters paired with monsters to train for the actual apocalypse? Mind blown. And no one was better suited for the lead than August. I found her extremely relatable with how she handled the mystery of her mother’s disappearance. No one wants to lose their mama! She definitely had a lot of pressure and weight on her shoulders but handled it all like a champ.
Watching August grow throughout the book was really satisfying. She didn’t always make the choices I would’ve (which made her feel real!), but her badassery felt earned and strong. And let’s talk about VIRGIL. 🥹 What a honey bear. I just adored all of his sweetness.
My only small gripe was the world-building. It was creative and immersive but felt a bit too heavy for me. Two different societies and a large cast meant I had to keep a few notes early on to keep everything straight. But once I got into the groove, it was worth the extra brainpower. Wee! I enjoyed the audiobook too because it pulled me into the story and really brought the world alive.
If you’re into atmospheric YA fantasy with monstrous twists, layered characters, and an end-of-the-world backdrop, this one should be on your list. 👏
I've loved Liselle Sambury's other books so when I found out she'd be writing a dark academia book I was hyped. But unfortunately this really didn't work for me.
The Characters: While there was a lot of complexity in the backstories and family legacies and Blackness of the characters, they felt very simplified and caricature. He's afraid of being a monster and willing to sell himself to master/slave servitude dynamics; she's angry about her missing mom and their messy history and (non-explicit) anorexia. But everything about that is kept to essentially just the surface level I just stated, rather than plumbing the nuance and depth that's clearly available.
The Academia?: She's accepted to this school and people keep tabs on her a little bit so she knows she can't skip classes... but I think that's it? And honestly I don't even remember the school aspects being mentioned much after that. She can't slack off and has to train, but almost all the training we see is with her friends in private, and all the slacking off we know about is just her narration but nothing we're privvy to.
I actually forgot until I saw the synopsis just now before writing my review that this was supposed to be a dark academia. It has no atmosphere, no intellectualism, and the only curiosity I felt about exploring topics (from the culture to the history to the clear propaganda to the serum to how all the magic works) was my own. Most of the MC's "investigating" her missing family members, even, just boils down to finding this one chick and hanging out with her. Even after finding out myseries and damning information, the only lurking and eavesdropping she does is related to finding out her standing in the competition.
The Games: Yes, she's an underdog. Yes, the games are rigged. Yes, there's one dude who inexplicably has a target painted specifically on her back and is like a dog with a bone.
These are the YA staples and I found them really tiring. For as untrained and new as she is, she shouldn't feel like the top of the class. Even when they purposefully set her up for failure, she still comes out on top. And never interrogates why she's so well-suited to what's being tested.
There's basically a single non-physical contest (vaguely related to the society's history) and not only is the reader unable to solve it at that point (due to a lack of world-building) but it's really unsatisfying to learn that there was no solution, it just mattered that the kids developed a system and stuck to it, not what that system was.
The Secret Societies: I think these organizations were introduced and intentionally kept vague so there was stuff to explore in the sequels, but it really felt so under-baked as to lose all of my intrigue. Clearly there are at least two conflicting histories being told, but the main character doens't get further than pointing that out.
The Writing: The world-building was probably the most inelegant piece of this book as it was delivered through lengthy exposition via dialogue. But also, for as much as characters seemed to yap on and on about it, I still know and care so little.
Monsters are a mutation of patient zero, monsters are passed down in families, monsters are meticulously tracked by the societies, monsters can exist in the wild outside of the families, monsters are unknown to the societies, monsters are born not made, monsters come from being bitten by other monsters, the society exists to train monsters for the coming prophecied war as tools, the society kills monsters, etc etc etc.
The world-building is messy and often contradictory and never felt tangible to me.
Funny side note: at the end -for reasons- the main character is all monologuing in her narration about how she's gonna train so hard and get so good that she can be a master of 2 monsters at the same time-- something rarely done and only by the tippy top. But then this chick she barely knows and has hardly interacted with comes by and is like nah, I'll bond to your family member you've known your whole life, you go ahead and eternally bond to this boy you've known a few weeks, even though it's literally standard practice for siblings to bond. Which immediatley renders her master of 2 monologuing moot.
Overall: This book was fine, reading it was fine. But I don't think it lived up to its premise. I felt like things were stretched and not fleshed out so they could be in sequels and it messed with the flow of this first book that's meant to hook you.