2.75 ★— An explosive ending rarely saves a mediocre middle for me, and this book is no exception.
I’ve enjoyed many of Elise Kova’s series, so a dragon-focused YA romantasy from her was something I knew I couldn’t pass up. Unfortunately, Dragon Cursed disappointed me in quite a few ways, even though my expectations weren’t particularly high going in.
One of the biggest issues this book has is the constant telling instead of showing. The story never trusts the reader to interpret anything on their own. Every potentially interesting interaction, emotional beat, or bit of tension is immediately broken down and explained by the text itself. Nothing is allowed to breathe, and it becomes exhausting very quickly.
Another major problem is the extremely mediocre middle section. The majority of the book takes place in a trial-like environment, where the heroine has to survive various tasks while working alongside other characters. If you’re going to make a trial arc the core of your story, it has to be compelling and filled with alllll the tension, danger, and strong character dynamics.
But… nothing. This book delivers the most uncooked chicken romance imaginable. As I mentioned earlier, every feeling the FMC and MMC have for each other is spoon-fed to the reader, and even then, the emotional payoff is nonexistent. The side characters fare no better, including the heroine’s supposed best friend, who never felt truly developed or important.
In general, the trials themselves weren’t interesting or well thought out, and I never felt the sense of danger or urgency that should come with a plot involving young people being placed in life-threatening situations to potentially trigger a curse. The stakes just didn't feel real.
The ending throws a lot at you, with multiple shocking moments and revelations, but because I was never invested in the characters or the story that this book set up, this didn’t land for me at all. If anything, I felt mostly overwhelmed with what was set up in the last few chapters in the story.
All this is so frustrating, because the ideas here have the potential to be interesting. The romance could have worked! And I genuinely enjoyed the dragon lore and how the dragons themselves were depicted! But with how generic and underdeveloped everything else felt, I walked away feeling let down by this.
Ultimately, this book reads like a first draft of something that could have been a tense, action-packed survival story, but it needed much stronger execution to get there.