3.75 stars
When I first saw the page count of The Tempest Blade, I genuinely thought someone was playing a prank on me. Like, I knew there was a lot to wrap up, but I was not entirely convinced it needed to be such a brick. In the end, I have to admit that it probably did, although I definitely felt the length at times, which is not exactly ideal when I want to tear through the grand, epic conclusion to a series I'd been enjoying so much.
Needless to say, The Tempest Blade was not the finale I expected, in both good and slightly frustrating ways, but for me it ultimately delivered where it mattered most. Ahnna and James remain the beating heart of the story, and I loved the sheer chaos of the continuation of their story: she is racing to save her homeland from a catastrophic threat, and he is right behind her, determined to drag her back and prove she murdered his father. The audacity of falling back in love while actively hunting each other will never not entertain me, and I felt the tension in every scene with all that heartbreak and suspicion tangled up with chemistry that refuses to die, even with a war breathing down their necks.
Though, surprise surprise, this duology does not stick to one couple, and instead Lara & Aren and Zarrah & Keris return to the spotlight, with all their perspectives woven together into an increasingly intricate political and military conflict. For the most part, I really loved this, and it was weirdly hysterical to watch their complicated loyalties and lingering resentments collide, particularly within the intense family dynamics that I have always felt were one of the series’ greatest strengths. At the same time, I have to admit that the addition of so many viewpoints made the plotting feel denser and occasionally overwhelming for me, with schemes, betrayals, and counterbetrayals piling up until I sometimes just had to let go and trust the story to sort itself out.
Now, I do have to say, where were the real consequences? Don’t get me wrong, Jensen is excellent at showing the cost of war, the irreversible damage of trauma, and the painfully slow process of working towards political change. And yet, I sometimes felt the plot armour shimmering a bit too brightly around certain characters, and I honestly would not have minded a few more dead bodies, sorry not sorry. At the same time, I was mostly just here for the romances, and I was quite happy to see everyone get their HEA (or at least HFN). Jensen nailed the balance between the romance and the larger political narrative across this series, and I loved that the level of restraint only made the romantic moments hit even harder.
Ultimately, I just had a blast binge reading this entire series over the past few weeks, and I think The Tempest Blade is a very worthy conclusion to it all. This series truly think it bridges the gap between epic political fantasy and romantasy in a way that feels smart, ambitious, and wildly entertaining, and if Jensen ever decides to revisit this world for the next generation, I already know I will be first in line, ready for more danger, more drama, and hopefully more heartache.