Threads of Love, Power, and Betrayal 🕸️🖤
The Weaver Bride by Lydia Gregovic — ARC Review ✨
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ // 5 Stars
Let me be clear: I am obsessed. This book has everything I crave — enemies-to-lovers tension, banter that cuts like silk, a dangerous competition, and a romance that made me scream into my pillow at 2am.
🕸️ The World:
At the center of this story are silkwitches and Weavers. Silkwitches are young women born with rare magic — but here’s the catch: that power can only be truly harnessed through marriage to a Weaver. Without a husband, their fate is the cloisters, locked away from the world. Each silkwitch’s gift is unique. Lovett’s? She can open any door. 🗝️
Weavers are the men of power. Once wed, they can bind and control a silkwitch’s magic, giving them the political and social dominance in this world. The imbalance between them is the perfect breeding ground for betrayal, manipulation, and obsession.
💔 The Story:
Lovett Tamerlane is a silkwitch who steals from the wealthy to survive. One wrong heist throws her directly into the path of Eliot Lear, the sharp-tongued son of a prominent Weaver family. Eliot offers her a deal: enter the Vainglory competition — a deadly contest where silkwitches fight for marriage to Noé Alaire — and help him solve the murder of his sister. If she succeeds, she’ll secure her future. If she fails… well, last year’s winner died.
The arrangement sounds simple. But nothing with a Weaver is ever simple.
🔥 The Romance:
Eliot + Lovett = enemies-to-lovers perfection. Their banter? Chef’s kiss. Their tension? Off the charts. And the slow burn payoff? Worth every page.
But here’s the kicker: the love triangle with Noé was written so well, I found myself rooting for him at times. (Yes, I screamed. Yes, I panicked. Yes, I loved it.)
🖤 Why It Worked for Me:
Banter sharp enough to draw blood 🗡️
A competition with deadly stakes
A mystery woven seamlessly into the romance
A love story that balances heartbreak and hope
Worldbuilding that feels fresh but instantly immersive
📚 Final Thoughts:
The Weaver Bride is gorgeous, unputdownable, and unforgettable. It’s not the “dark romance” label I expected — more YA-adjacent dark fantasy with thoughtful trigger warnings (violence, blood, death, trauma) — but it worked perfectly for me.
This book gave me everything: swoon, suspense, heartbreak, betrayal. I am counting down the seconds until Lydia Gregovic gives us book two.
💌 Thank you to NetGalley, Random House Publishing Group - Ballantine, and Lydia Gregovic for the ARC.