⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️Review of The Fourth Fury by S. Bacchante
The Fourth Fury is dark, intense, and gorgeously written a gothic fantasy that dives deep into female rage, power, and survival. From the first line about “a slave girl… the lamb she once was and the wolf she has become,” I knew I was in for something heavy and haunting. It’s a story about transformation and vengeance, but also about reclaiming who you are after the world has tried to destroy you.
What I loved
The atmosphere in this book is unreal. Bacchante really nails that gothic, moody feeling everything feels raw and emotional, like the air itself is charged with pain and fury. The writing is stunning: vivid, poetic, and full of imagery that lingers long after you put the book down. You can feel the protagonist’s journey from innocence to survival, from victim to someone who refuses to be powerless anymore.
I also loved that this book doesn’t hold back. It’s not a soft or comforting story it’s brutal at times, but it feels honest. It captures what it means to fight back against systems that want to silence or destroy you. The pacing does start slow, but once it picks up, it really picks up. The last half had me hooked.
The world-building is also more atmospheric than detailed. If you like fantasy with intricate magic systems and clear rules, this one might leave you with questions.
Overall
Still, The Fourth Fury is a powerful, haunting book that stuck with me. It’s fierce, emotional, and unapologetically dark a story that dives deep into rage, trauma, and transformation. It won’t be for everyone, but if you’re into gothic fantasy, morally grey characters, and prose that feels like poetry dipped in blood and moonlight… this one’s for you.
Would I recommend it?
Yes but only if you’re in the right headspace. It’s not light reading, and it deals with some pretty heavy themes like violence, slavery, and emotional trauma. But if you’re okay with that, and you want something rich, dark, and full of feeling, The Fourth Fury is absolutely worth your time.
💜 Please check trigger warnings before reading your mental health matters. The darkness of the story never really lets up it’s emotionally intense from start to finish, which can be exhausting depending on your mood.