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14 days and 10:47:40

5 copies available
U.S. only
Rate this book
A woman with no past. A warrior with no future. Their love could save the world—or burn it down.

Fourth Wing—by way of Chinese mythology—meets The Hunger Games in a perilous world where a young woman with no memory and little magic may hold the key to uniting the Dominions and saving the mortal realm, from the New York Times bestselling author of Read with Jenna pick Searching for Sylvie Lee and Girl in Translation.

This deluxe limited first run edition features a cover with foil, designed sprayed edges, and gorgeous map endpapers—while supplies last!

“A page turner. Tender yet tense, loving yet steamy, dangerous yet darkly humorous…Dominion creates something entirely new.” —Brigitte Knightley, New York Times bestselling author of The Irresistible Urge to Fall for Your Enemy


In a world divided into four rival Dominions, power is everything—and Rubi Morningtail has almost none. Three years after the Annihilation destroyed her homeland and shattered her memories, she lives as an Azure refugee in the Dominion of the Silver Tyger, scraping by as a ribbon dancer and hiding her little bit of singing magic. When she wounds a massive battle tyger on her doorstep, she draws the notice of Blake Axefire—supreme metal mage, leader of the royal tyger warriors, and the last man an Azure should trust. His sentence? Cast her into the Bonding, a brutal trial where tygers choose their riders and slaughter the rest. Surviving is unthinkable.

But survive she does. Now she’s stuck on Blake’s elite team racing to reseal the Anchors to the demon realm. With rebels striking, demons rising, and the Dominions at each other’s throats, Rubi must unlock the truth of her magic and her past…while resisting her dangerous attraction to the ruthless warrior who could be her redemption—or her ruin.

448 pages, Hardcover

Expected publication July 14, 2026

21 people are currently reading
9198 people want to read

About the author

Jean Kwok

13 books2,356 followers
Jean Kwok is the award-winning, New York Times and international bestselling author of Dominion (coming 7/14/26), The Leftover Woman, Searching for Sylvie Lee, Girl in Translation, and Mambo in Chinatown. Her books have been selected by Read with Jenna, Good Morning America, CBS New York, Book of the Month, LibraryReads, Indie Next, Goodreads Choice Awards, Belletrist, and Discover Great New Writers, and most of her work is in development for film and television.

She has been selected for numerous honors, including the American Library Association Alex Award, the Chinese American Librarians Association Best Book Award, and the Sunday Times EFG Short Story Award international shortlist. She immigrated from Hong Kong to Brooklyn when she was five and worked in a Chinatown clothing factory for much of her childhood. She received her bachelor’s degree from Harvard University and earned an MFA from Columbia University, working as a professional ballroom dancer between degrees.
She reviews for the New York Times Book Review and has served as judge for International Thriller Writers, Tucson Festival of Books, Ragdale, and San Miguel Writers’ Conference, and her work has been published in more than twenty countries and is taught in schools across the world. She lives in the New York area.

Learn more about Jean here:
www.jeankwok.com
https://www.facebook.com/JeanKwokAuthor

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5 stars
27 (29%)
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31 (33%)
3 stars
23 (25%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 79 reviews
Profile Image for Andi.
1,710 reviews
gave-up-on
November 7, 2025
I like to thank the publisher and NetGalley for allowing me a read.

I love Asian fantasy. I really, truly do. I jump for joy when one comes around because it's 'yes, something fresh and new'.

However, at 10% in I started getting worried, and at 70% in and two sex scenes later I threw in the towel.

I never read more than two pages of Iron Wing, but I can say - if you enjoyed Iron Wing, you'll enjoy this. The writing is very juvenile, accentuated by 'fuck' 'damn' and sex scenes. A woman with blue hair (and the power of using ribbon dancers) and a mysterious background bonds with a tiger queen making her public enemy #1 in a world where people hate her type. She also doesn't have powers at 24 (or almost 24, she turns 24 in the book) because they just haven't manifested. She acts tough in her first two chapters and the more she hangs around the twin blade leftover, her bravado slips and she becomes too infatuated with him and needs to know where he is 24/7.

Cue a mystical plot by a woman that is a cross between Zordon from Power Rangers and one of Draculas Brides saying that the four dominion locks are breaking, rebels are trying to take down the mean bad king, a princess who likes to be mean just to be mean, and other trope-y things, nothing felt sensical. I felt like I had read a lower-grade version of this when Eragon came out years ago.

All in all, there is a lot of ideas that COULD have been good and should have been good, but when you see others do it better why try?

Out of respect for the author I am choosing not to rate it due to not finishing it.
Profile Image for Mai H..
1,392 reviews835 followers
2026
November 19, 2025
ANHPI TBR

📱 Thank you to NetGalley and G.P. Putnam's Sons
Profile Image for Nicholas Budler.
62 reviews3 followers
November 7, 2025
Alright, after a long hiatus, I’m back on my romantasy grind.

The story started off a bit quickly, not fully developing the main characters – or the setting – before jumping straight into Rubi and Blake meeting. And, per requirements of romantasy books, Rubi was a poor, distressed peasant who could stop demons with her singing. Later in the book, she gets like one whole month to train up to the level of elite warriors from basically scratch and somehow pulls it off as these FMCs tend to do. She then spent a lot of time doubting herself which, like, yeah…

But those romantasy cliches aside, I liked this story. The scale and politics of the four Dominions created something larger than just the usual romance, which I needed to stay engaged with the plot. I appreciated the balance between a divine quest and the slow burn between Rubi and Blake, who I actually think is a pretty chill dude. I liked them together and a lot of it was him being vulnerable, generally cool (especially with his family), and apparently laying wicked pipe. Speaking of family, I loved the entire found family: Sweet Edith, Anibaba the cat, and the rest of them. Those moments provided levity between the drama of Rubi and Blake falling in love and smashing constantly (including when she was near death, which, like, get after it I guess).

I get why others have noted this has undertones of Fourth Wing, particularly thanks to Flame, but for this to be compared to The Hunger Games I would have needed more from the Culling, which I still don’t fully understand. But much of that was redeemed in the last 15% of the book, where the action kicks off in earnest. And it definitely hits. The warriors from every Dominion – and their different fighting styles – coming to repair the Anchor while fighting twisted demons was good shit.

Ultimately, I wanted more from the Culling and the Ravager – but it was a fast & fun read with a solid ending that really sets up book two storyline to have potential... and adding Draven to the mix means there’s some crazy shit ahead for these dramatic & possessive lovers.

Be careful reading this on a crowded bus when heading to work.

### eARC review ###
Profile Image for Paige.
141 reviews
November 14, 2025
By the end of this book, I had a whiteboard out and looking like the meme from "Always Sunny" because things were adding up and I have so many thoughts and possibilities for the next books to come. If you love a girl coming into her power, bonding to powerful animals, and a blossoming relationship with the deadliest warrior, then this is a great start for you. Also, the side characters keep you on your toes and they are so easy to fall in love with. They make transitions and heavy moments a little lighter with hope and humor.

Rubi has no memories from her life before coming into the Silver's land. She dances to earn her living to keep Edith and herself alive, even just barely. The dominions are balanced by yin and yang. Yangs are the powerful ones that have the most magic and are chosen to rule. Yangs are mainly men and made all decisions with themselves in mind, even if the Silver Princess is a yin and bonded to a tyger, which is very rare.

Demons are escaping through weakening anchor points, and it is up the different dominions to work together and fix them to save their lands. The demons are working to take control, devour the one spoken of in the prophecy, and then they will take control of the land. The Azure dominion has already fallen years before in The Annihilation.
Profile Image for Jules.
500 reviews8 followers
November 18, 2025
I received an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

TW: death, murder, attempted rape, violence, torture, kidnapping, slavery, loss of agency, harassment, sexism

Damn. This is an enthralling combination of Silver Elite, Divergent, and a classic Disney tale* and it is inspired by the best parts of each. There are shifters as well as metal, water, and fire benders, organized under clans with different social hierarchies (e.g., magic power, matriarchy, patriarchy). However, the clans aren't in the best of terms with each other and there's internal unrest so there's a wartime sentiment made worse by not so natural disasters and an impending prophecy.

In the midst of this increasing danger, a 23 year old Azure (shifter clan) finds herself thrown into a challenging new position in the Silver Tyger clan (martial combat and tygers). Can she find herself and maybe even love? Can she survive the battles to come? Who can she rely on and what secrets is everyone hiding? The plot twists are excellent and the book is a true page-flipper.

There are some points where the info dump of world lore could be much more subtle but that's outweighed by the positives.

* Not mentioned here for a non-spoiler review.
Profile Image for Kerin Ray.
211 reviews6 followers
November 9, 2025
GASP!!!!!! I ate every single page up in this book. The plot and world building were so extraordinary that I was completely immersed in it. FMC no memories of her past. Thinking she is weak and nothing. Knowing nothing of herself at all thrown into something she felt she didn’t belong then ending up being the center of it. Then the tiger bonds! I mean huge tigers! The tension! The slow burn. The hidden identities! Yes there is more than 1!!!! The twist and turns not knowing what’s going to happen next! The MMC feared by all. Extremely powerful. Hidden royalties everywhere. The way this author wrote this book there is so much information but she wrote it so extremely well that it flowed and flowed seemingly. Then the cliffhanger at the END!! I was floored!!!! I cannot wait to read more! -Kerin Ray
Profile Image for Angie S..
139 reviews2 followers
November 2, 2025
Absolutely a 5 star read. I devoured this book in 2 sittings. The scenes that the author paints are so vivid. The story is engrossing and pulls you in from the very beginning. The pacing is even and keeps you enthralled. The magic system isn't complicated so you never feel like you don't understand what is happening, which is something many readers look for in a fantasy.
The plot twists at the end, honestly, had my jaw on the floor. I can't believe that I'm going to have to wait likely years to find out what happens next.
Profile Image for BonBon ♡.
48 reviews3 followers
January 2, 2026
I literally devoured this story and I think that this has the potential to be such a fun series! It definitely had some cliche romantasy moments but the politics of the four dominions, the different types of magic, the action scenes, interesting characters, and the bonded Tygers kept my attention! The world is so well explained, the pacing is enjoyable, and the romance is well balanced with the prophecy, war, and quest from the gods.

I cannot wait to continue this series, especially after how that ending sets us up for book two!

4.5 ⭐️
🖤Thank you NetGalley for this eARC!
Profile Image for Stephanie G.
83 reviews3 followers
Review of advance copy received from Edelweiss+
December 14, 2025
this was phenomenal great storytelling and characters you love.
Profile Image for Mini Mo .
44 reviews1 follower
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 10, 2026
5 ⭐

I absolutely LOVED this book! My least favorite thing about this book is that I read it as an ARC so I have to wait even longer to read the next book in the series...

This book follows Rubi our FMC. She's an Azure refuge in the Silver dominion. Rubi lost all of her memories from before the annihilation. She lives with Edith the woman who has cared for her since she woke up on a boat, leaving the Azure dominion.

Rubi is a ribbon dancer and one night she attracted the attention of a Tyger warrior. Not just any warrior, a leader.

Blake is the leader of the Silver Tygers. He forces Rubi to participate in a trial that starts the chain reaction of changes for Rubi.

In search of her memories, Rubi discovers more than she ever thought possible. She learns about what really happened to the royal families during the annihilation.

Just like in any good fantasy, Rubi also has to help save the world from total destruction. Rubi grows as a person but also as a friend, lover and family.

I couldn't put this book down and I am BEGGING for the release of book 2!!!!

Thank you so much NetGalley for this incredible ARC!
Profile Image for Kerstin | mommyandme.bookclub.
428 reviews23 followers
November 23, 2025
Thank you Putnam Books and NetGalley for the eARC!

What a ride! I couldn’t put this down! Dominion is a romantic epic fantasy filled with tenuous power dynamics, vibrant scenes, and high-stakes.

This book was a bit of rollercoaster. While I had some inkling of where this might go, I was still left in shock at the end.

There was a point in the middle of the book where I thought “hmmm…this is ok. But I something felt missing.” The final chapters turned it around completely! Things really fell into place, and this went from four star territory to five stars! I am definitely eager to continue to see where this series goes.

Some highlights for me:
🔥 Elemental magic
⚔️ World-spanning conflict with high-stakes
🐅 Tyger bonds and other mythical animals
⚔️ Deadly tournaments
🔥 Themes of generational trauma and colonialism
🐅 Secrets!!!

Read this if you like vibrant, intense romantasy with open-door scenes in a world on the brink of destruction.
Profile Image for Bookjunky.
74 reviews1 follower
November 18, 2025
I was provided this ARC through Netgalley.

Let's start with what I loved:

Beautiful world building and an interesting magic system. The Four Dominions and the way they each have their own unique magic was interesting and fresh. The concept of balance and power, and how the magical strength is classified between yin and yang is a refreshing change from the usual magic systems.

What was mid:

Character building and development- a lot of this felt rushed, especially between Rubi and Blake. There was almost no space between not knowing each other, hating each other, declaring undying love for each other.

Rubi's character as a whole was just... meh. I think she started out as a decent character, but somewhere along the way her development flat-lined and she just kind of floats through the rest of the book.

The Gods- about halfway through the book one of them shows up and essentially says "Hey, the gods said it's time for you mortals to do some damn work and pitch in against the big baddie, pick your best and brightest and let's get on with it."

I don't know why other reviews have compared it to Hunger Games meets Fourth Wing. There really isn't any comparison. There was a split second where I thought there would be, but it was basically just a bunch of people thrown into an arena with tygers who ate anyone that wasn't interesting enough. 3 pages and it was over.

What I disliked:

Rubi suffers from an extreme case of Mary Sue. She starts out as a nobody with barely any magic, but by the end she's the ONE, the ONLY ONE, and suddenly she's the most powerful ever to be born and everyone wants a piece of her. It feels like she's now every single romance and fantasy trope combined. And of course she can't be with Blake even though they swore their undying love to each other five pages ago because now she has her memories back and guess what? She's already in love with a DIFFERENT super powerful man, while a THIRD super powerful man secretly pines for her from the shadows. And let's not forget the other super powerful guy who kidnaps Rubi for the big baddie, but needs to have her before he hands her over. She's a walking aphrodisiac, apparently.

Ok, this might be personal preference... but the names. The names are so cringe. Rubi Morningtail? Blake Axefire? Ire Frostbane? It sounds like the author opened up Wizards 101 and just kept hitting random for the name generator.

While I'm at it, let's talk about the fact that for the first half of the book, Rubi mentally refers to Blake Axefire by his full name. Several times in one page. I felt like Regina George... "Stop trying to make Blake Axefire happen. It's not going to happen."

To summarize- it was a decent read that felt like it could have been a good one with a little more editing and character development, and maybe some paring down of the tropes. It has a lot of potential, and I'll probably read the second book to find out what happens next!
Profile Image for Amjed.
Author 2 books29 followers
November 23, 2025
I am excited to review Dominion by Jean Kwok! First off, this novel was my introduction to the romantasy genre, and Dominion is the first novel in the genre that I've completed from start to finish. I have a tendency to DNF if I'm not feeling it, but I do give every book an honest-to-god college try before that happens!! Anyway, on to my personal review. This was such a fun read! I loved, loved, loved the cover design and was mesmerized by the artwork, the vibrant blue ribbon, and just the flow and movement evoked from a still image. The story is about a young woman who has no memories of her past and takes refuge in a rival land (Dominion) by working as a dancer. She also has buried talents she doesn't understand. I was sucked into the story of Rubi quickly as the novel jumped right into the plot without the world-building info dump that I thought was part of every start to a novel in the fantasy/romantasy genre. I appreciated the fast-paced beginning, as I am an avid reader of thrillers and suspense novels and pacing matters. I am not familiar with the rules of this genre, so I saw that as a plus because I wasn't looking for anything specific or a trope to play out, and I was able to enjoy the storyline purely for the pleasure of reading it. Of course, there's a level of suspension of disbelief required due to the genre itself, and I think that's what made it so fun for me...it was so out of the realm of my usual reading list. I am a huge fan of Jean Kwok and her suspense novels, so I was obviously excited to read anything she wrote next. Another aspect I appreciated was the absence of dragons. Sorry, I loved Game of Thrones on HBO, never read the books. I love watching The Witcher, but I have never read the comics or the books. I think this is closer to The Witcher, which I absolutely adore. Instead of dragons, there are tigers, mind-reading tigers, lots of action, and tension developing between Rubi and Blake, without giving too much away. BUT Rubi is a ribbon dancer from another Dominion, and everyone wants her (of course, it's a romance and a fantasy)!! I will say there is quite a bit of spice (remember this is my opinion, and this is my first romantasy). Anyway, I loved Rubi, her makeshift family, and her spunk. The story arc kept me engaged, and by the end of the book, I was invested. The ending was a surprise to me, and it serves as a significant lead-in to Book Two, which continues Rubi's journey. I look forward to the next book in the series! Thank you, NetGalley, for the advance copy!
Profile Image for Clare.
27 reviews
December 3, 2025
thank u to netgalley and putnam for the arc and the opportunity to read and review this book!

overall, i enjoyed this book. i can see it being very popular with the romantasy crowd. however, i do think this story could have benefitted with a little more of everything. the pacing was a little off overall. the descriptors were beautifully written, but a lot of it felt rushed and cliché. it was still a good read, i just felt like there could have been more.
Profile Image for Marissa Bouvier.
160 reviews8 followers
November 2, 2025
Now this is advertised as a fourth wing meets hunger games with Chinese Mythology and I truly think that discredits the story a bit. You go in thinking that it will be.. fourth wing meets hunger games which this isn't.

You have these big massive tyger creatures who choose their bonds and are vicious towards those who they deem unworthy.
Our FMC Rubi is from humble beginnings with no memory of her past, and by chance she crosses paths with our MMC Blake who tosses her to the pits to bond with a tyger. After defying all odds she bonds and is no thrown into a world unlike anything she's experienced. Magic, war, demons, uprisings, and the works are weaved into this tale.

This was fun. I liked it, and would 1000% read the second book. This had a MMC who was delicious and a resilient FMC with wickeddd cool powers/weapons. The training for a war with demons was there, but the focus was more on character drama rather than power development (which is okay I ate it up). There was talks of power struggles with other Dominion's and class differences but I needed just a bit more information and ironing out. Would I recommend this book? Absolutely. It was a fun, quick read with a lot of promise especially since this will be a series.

Thank you to @putnambooks and the author for allowing me early reading access! I can't wait to get my trophy copy next year!
Profile Image for Emma.
124 reviews
January 3, 2026
2.5 stars rounded up


Dominion had potential - interesting world, good pacing, banter, plot twists, nice writing… but the tropes brought it down. My least favorite was the insta-love/attraction. What happened to the actual slow burn and real connection other than forced circumstances? I am interested in seeing where the next book goes after that cliffhanger, but I was overall disappointed.

Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for allowing me to read it early!
Profile Image for Chii ✨.
97 reviews1 follower
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 4, 2026
the blurb really brought me in for this one but these are opinions alone.

Fourth Wing w/ an Asian mythological twist. Hunger games not so much. I almost, almost gave this a 2.5 round up to 3 and then found myself being more angry about all the potentials and what left me disappointed vs what I really enjoyed. Thus dropped it to a solid 2. I'll tell you why:


Likes:

Demons, 4 dominions that specialize in different magics, tygers, zodiacs. Sooo much here that can be expanded on and I loved it. World building on point. So much potential here but that was it. The yin and yang, the balance. Oh, and the epilogue really saved this one. 

Everything else:

Writing felt juvenile, really. Pacing was so sporadic so I'm sure there could be points that will be hopefully, be fixed. Not a fan of the insta-love kind of thing either

Rubi felt like a whole ass Mary Sue:
  ◤classic romantasy trope “ am a nobody w/ very powerful powers but i don't actually know who I really am” I said what I said. and then I am suddenly very strong @ the end and now all men will pin for me
  ◤quite literally, all the men for some reason did pin for her? 

Blake
  ◤You had some good points, you really did but when you started to show favoritism for Rubi despite all the clan politics going on man. At least you had layers for character. 

I'm not sure if I will pick up book two.I saw the vision, but I don't know, I was mostly disappointed; overall I enjoyed the world building but it's going to have to do more than that for me. I'll reconsider this rating if there are any changes to the final version.

Thank you netgalley & gp putnam sons for the e-arc for an honest review
Profile Image for Book Nook Baddie.
35 reviews1 follower
November 3, 2025
Thank you to Jean Kwok and Putnam Publishing for the advanced copy in exchange for a review.

Mythical creatures... divine warriors... a predestined battle. Dominion by Jean Kwok delivers a thrilling adventure intertwined with mystic culture and intrigue.

The upside: there is Asian culture and myth woven into the story which makes this book unique.

The downside: this book is very similar to Fourth Wing- just swap out dragons for tigers.

There are unique elements that are fun to explore. And the book has a decent level of spice that made certain chapters steamy and enjoyable to read. Dominion has an interesting premise and fun characters. Readers will fall head over heals for the Twin Blade for sure!
Profile Image for Lisa.
1,159 reviews572 followers
December 19, 2025
I was immediately pulled into the world of dominions and tygers and ting/yang powers.

High action, intense romance and lots of surprises along the way.

My only gripe? An ending that I need an immediate follow up on and will need to wait for the sequel to get 🫠
Profile Image for Rayne.
100 reviews13 followers
Want to read
October 23, 2025
Very intrigued by this one 👀
Profile Image for melhara.
1,884 reviews90 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 4, 2026
Much of this book was a 2.5/5 star for me (as this was a very derivative and formulaic romantasy), but I enjoyed the ending which left me intrigued and interested to see how the rest of the series will unfold. Therefore, I'm bumping up my rating to 3 stars.

This is a great introductory romantasy for fans of Fourth Wing and KPop Demon Hunters. Picture Rumi from KPop Demon Hunters (except in this case, her name is Rubi, ha!) but with blue hair, amnesia, and magical singing powers. Living as a refugee, she somehow finds herself competing in a deadly trial to Bond with a tyger and become a tyger rider/Tyger Warrior for a dominion who sees her as inferior.


Although with the blue hair, she'll probably look more like Jinx from Arcane:


This book has so much potential. I'm most fascinated by the worldbuilding, the characters, the different dominions, the different powers across the different dominions, and the threat of demons overtaking the world. But most of it was underdeveloped and wasn't delivered to the standard that I was hoping for. There was way too much front loaded exposition and rushed pacing that took away from any relationship building between characters and limited my ability to feel fully immersed in what I'm sure is supposed to be a lush and beautiful world full of political intrigue and nuanced culture.

The Insta-Love
What I hated, hated, the most though, was the instalove and surface-level relationship between Rubi and Blake (which is why I'm hoping their relationship doesn't work out in the next book 🤞 One can hope) .

This leads to my complaints about Blake - the most one-dimensional MMC I've encountered in a long time. How many times do I need to be reminded that he's one half of the 'Twin Blade'? (Answer: at least 36 times). It also felt like there was a lot more to Blake that meets the eye but all the interesting reveals about his character were underbaked. () Hopefully we will find out more in the next book and see more character development.

The Pacing
Aside from the instalove, there was also insta-friendships and insta-bonds due to the rushed pacing of the story. I suspect that the expositionary writing that was dumped on readers in the first 30% of the book was to make way for the "fast-paced" and "action-packed" story which consisted of a rushed training montage, poorly explained magic system (despite all the exposition), and sudden journey to meet all the other dominions and save the world. There was so much crammed into this one book, it's no wonder all the relationships have to rely on insta-connection!

Additional Notes and Comments:
I think this book would have benefitted from a prologue that depicted the events of the Wedding of Flame and Sky, which is alluded to throughout the book as being a catalyst for the ruin that their world is facing right now.

I also think this book would benefit from a map (showing the four dominions - Dominion of the Silver Tyger, Azure Dragon, Red Phoenix, and Onyx Tortoise) and glossary (for example, for terms like Zenith and Ambush Master, and the magical ability 'null' which was introduced at the end of the book but was never explained as to what it was...), which will hopefully be available at final publishing.

tl;dr - As previously mentioned, despite all it's shortcomings, this was still a fun read and I really like how the book ended. The ending opens up the potential for the second book to be even better than the first and to expand on the magic system (which wasn't demonstrated very well here), worldbuilding, politics, and character relationships. I'm putting a lot of weight on the potential for improvement and look forward to reading the next book to see if it delivers.

**I received an ARC from the publisher via NetGalley for review consideration, but all opinions are my own.**
_______________________________
If you like the following, you might enjoy Dominion or vice-versa:
Fourth KPop Wind Fushigi Rose
Profile Image for Anjolie.
40 reviews
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
December 17, 2025
Thank you NetGalley for a copy of the e-book in exchange for a honest review.

This is a 3.5 Star read for me but rounding down because there was so much that didn’t work for me.

What did work for me -

The cover art and title. These two things piqued my interest and felt like they promised something new and fresh. I loved the idea of a tiger in a fantasy world.

I loved the Chinese Mythology and use of the Zodiac in this story. I’ve not read a lot stories that use this particular mythology as a backdrop and was excited to see where this story would go.


What didn’t work for me -

Plot : If you’re familiar with the romantasy genre at all, then you already know how this story’s beginning, middle and end. I think just about every genre trope that could be used was deployed. Marginalized, Outcast girl with no memory of her past? Check. Found family member that taught her some knife skills and she feels protective over? Check. MMC is the general, top dog of the kings army? Check. Training Montage? Check. Most powerful, magical beast claims her? Check. She’s the key to saving everyone? Check. There was nothing new here and I wanted to DNF this book.

I thought when the Diviner came down that we’d finally pick up the pace and plot but things got clunky. Even when things were interesting they weren’t clear.

The epilogue was the only thing that made me want to read the next book, because that while I had my eye on him (won’t name him and spoil it here), I didn’t see that coming.

Pacing: It felt like the book didn’t realize that we were at pivotal plot moments and rushed past them. I expected the Culling to be such a major Plot point but it was over very quickly. This book is marketed as Hunger Games meets Fourth Wing. But there were no games, trials are over very quickly, and any magical creature / rider selection happens immediately and is over with in the first 1/3 of the book. The book doesn’t feel like it knows what it is or how it should pace itself.

Writing:
The dialogue felt like it was written out fully, when to be more believable it should be more shorthand or the tension should be explained with inner dialogue. I’m thinking of the final scene with Blake where she gives him a pretty blunt recap of what she learned about herself and what that meant for him.
I also kept getting annoyed with the language used during battle scenes. A Demon would be “quick as lightning” but then the band of warriors would have time to run into a cave, split into teams, and then wait for the onslaught of demons again. Or in the middle of an action scene Rubi is calling out “Kingsolver, watch over Edit and Blake for me!” Like, I’m sorry, she’s not yelling full sentences in the heat of battle.
Flame never got interesting. Didn’t had a personality beyond being regal and that bummed me outttt. The tiger was such a selling point for me!

Romance: I have no idea if I’m supposed to like Blake or not. Was the writing supposed to make me love them together? Or were we very purposely being lead to see him as a weird fit for her? Because the dialogue was very heavy handed in their realizing they want each other. But there was no banter in this book. Not that I need them to be funny but there was very little to grab onto with their relationship. They moved from not liking each other to loving each other almost immediately. And he’s pushing her to pair and bond. I was suspicious the whole time. And I don’t like that, I want to be pulled in and rooting for them. Rip the rug out at the end and shock me but I don’t want to feel sus about my MMC the whole time. Also, HE’S A GENERAL. He lost all credibility for me when he starts publicly showing his favoritism toward her when there is so much to be determined with clan politics and end of times reckoning happening.

I wanted to like this but didn’t. Not sure if I’ll read book two.
Profile Image for Hannah⸝*.☘︎ ́˖.
121 reviews11 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
December 12, 2025
༄˖°.🐅✨.ೃ࿔*:・ Thank you to NetGalley and the publishers for providing me with an ARC of Dominion in exchange for an honest review.

That being said—here it is! 🥁🥁🥁

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ (with some caveats)

Right from the start, Dominion drops you headfirst into a fully realized, high-concept world divided into four rival Dominions, each with its own magic, culture, and power structure. And I won’t lie—at first, it felt like being tossed into the deep end without knowing how to swim. The magic systems, political tensions, and history of the Annihilation come at you fast, and for the first ~20% I had to slow down and recalibrate.

But once things clicked? I was locked in.

This world is ambitious and packed with original concepts. From elemental-based magic to the demon realm and the Anchors holding everything together, it’s clear a lot of thought went into the foundation of this story. It is a lot to keep track of—but ultimately, it was worth the effort.

༘˚⋆𐙚。⋆𖦹. Rubi Morningtail (FMC)
Rubi is a refugee, a ribbon dancing performer, and a mystery—even to herself. Three years after losing her homeland and her memories, she’s surviving on the fringes with only fragments of singing magic she barely understands. I really enjoyed her resilience and quiet determination. Watching her navigate survival, trauma, and power she doesn’t yet comprehend made her easy to root for.

⋆༺𓃬 Blake Axefire (MMC)
Blake is a supreme metal mage, one half of the king's twin blades, ambush mater / leader of the royal tyger warriors, and—unsurprisingly—not someone Rubi should trust. I also found Blake extremely easy to route for, his alpha, protective, possessiveness was HOT, but honestly i felt it could have been a little bit more developed. His first encounter with Rubi happens fast and felt a little scandalous right out of the gate (him pushing her up against a wall immediately was… bold), but I didn’t exactly mind. Their chemistry was there early on, though I’ll say it felt more surface-level for most of the book, only really deepening in the final 10%.

꧁ᬊᬁ𖤍ᬊ᭄꧂ Trials, Found Family, & Plot Momentum
Once Rubi is forced into the Bonding—a brutal trial where tygers choose their riders or kill them—the story truly takes off. The trials, the found family dynamic, and the escalating danger had me clutching my Kindle and refusing to put it down. This is where the book shines the most.

That said, my biggest critique is pacing. So many major conflicts are introduced and then resolved within just a few pages. I wanted more time to sit in the tension, to feel the emotional weight of what was happening before it moved on to the next big moment.

⊹₊✎⋆. Editing & Final ARC Notes
There were a few typos that pulled me out briefly (understandable). One moment in particular—where Edith speaks to Rubi and Rubi responds with “I won’t”—made me pause and reread, but nothing that affected my enjoyment overall.

I’ll be honest: there were moments where the prose felt a little too clean or repetitive, enough that I briefly wondered if AI had been involved. But honestly? By the end, I didn’t care. The story had me in a chokehold.

˗ˏˋ ꒰ ✉︎ ꒱ ˎˊ˗ Final Thoughts
Dominion is ambitious, immersive, and emotionally gripping—especially in the back half. While I wish the conflicts had been given more room to breathe, the world, the characters, and the stakes kept me invested all the way through.

I keep my reviews spoiler free, but C'MON the ending??? The epilogue????? I am sat. Waiting for the next book. Patiently. (Not really.)

This is absolutely a book I’ll be thinking about—and I cannot wait to see where the series goes next.

Tropes / What to Expect:
🐅 Trial by Combat / Bonding Trials
🔥 Elemental & Culture-based Magic
👑 Reluctant Heroine
🩸 Political Conflict Between Realms
🫀 Found Family
⚔️ Warrior MMC
🌒 Amnesia / Hidden Past
💥 Ongoing Series with Cliffhanger Energy
Profile Image for Cal.
51 reviews2 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 8, 2026
Thank you Netgalley, Author Jean Kwok, and Putnam Publishing for the eArc of Dominion in exchange for an honest review.

Rubi has no memories of her life before waking up on an Azure Dragon refugee boat into the Silver Tyger dominion with her new friend Edith. They survive day to day life in a dominion that hates them. However, after a routine dance Rubi is targeted by a rogue Tyger and the Dominions Ambush Master. From that moment, her life spirals into survival and chaos as she thrust through trials and tribulations. She must prove her worth as a Tyger Warrior, help save the Dominion from the Serpent Lord of the Netherworld, and reclaim the memories that were once lost.

This story was up and down for me. I enjoyed the storytelling and world we were thrown into. At times I was wishing the book was a bit longer or more focused. It felt rushed during parts.

What I enjoyed:
- World - Building and rooted in Chinese lore. I'm a fan of XianXia, Wuxia, and Xuanhuan dramas so for me this was a fun read where I had a lot of references on fighting styles to pull from.
- The training arc was fun and the Rubi not being a sword or bow wielder was such a relief. I'm honestly glad it wasn't a normal weapon either.
- One word: Aftercare. This book gave a second of aftercare and clean up, for that, I thank you.
- Rubi, Flame, Quinn, Calla, Nelly, Thyme, and Edith were great.

What I did not enjoy:
- Blake. I'm sorry. At first it was a hot and cold thing and then just as I wanted to like him, it shifted. I can handle an over-possessive MMC but his possessiveness went to far and was too great. I also did not enjoy how pushy he was.
- The pacing felt off. Some moments were good, but then we fell into the trap of rushing towards the next plot line and then sprinting towards the next moment to be in bed. It felt as if it was starting to waver and crumble later in the middle and out towards the end.
- Melissa had potential to be a great rival to friend, but she ended up just being a one note character that hated the FMC nearly the entirety of the story. Even at the end that hate still seemed to be there. The reason for hating the FMC? Because of a man.
- Predictable. This story was overly predictable at each turn. There was little left to mystery or guessing and even the epilogue just throws answers to what could be good build - ups at the reader.
- Final fight. It felt rushed. Rushed and predictable. I do think the start of the sealing should have been saved for a separate book rather than attempting to cram it into this one that already had so much happening. It just felt very lack luster.

Overall:
At the end of the day, while I have my issues with the book, it was still fun. I don't care for Blake or much of the romance. It just moved too fast for me to really care about any of the characters. We weren't given time with them to understand them.
Profile Image for kay.
237 reviews1 follower
January 28, 2026
I have so many thoughts and feelings about this book, I don’t even know where to start.

First things first, this book is being marketed as Fourth Wing meets Hunger Games. Personally, I do not see the tie in for the Hunger Games and feel this promotion may do the book a disservice. People reading this book and expecting similarities to the Hunger Games series will likely be disappointed. Also, while I do agree that the pacing of this book is similar to Fourth Wing and there is a similar event to Threshing/Bonding, that is where the similarities stop. Unlike FW, this book is not academia. With that being said, if you enjoyed Fourth Wing, I do think this book is a solid recommendation. As a fan of FW, K-pop Demon Hunters, and the Artefacts of Ouranos series by Nisha J. Tuli, I thoroughly enjoyed this book myself and highly recommend if you want a romantasy with similar elements that engrosses you in Chinese mythology.

******stop reading here if you are someone who thinks tropes are spoilers******

Dominion and the entire Silk and Iron Trilogy series has the potential to be 5 stars. Since this is only book 1 and an unfinished series, I’m rating 4 stars for now. There are also some elements/tropes that I’m not a huge fan of (i.e., insta-love [where’s the tension??], love triangle? [or love trapezoid? lol]). But again, it’s only book 1 of 3.

Now can we talk about the last 100 pages? Because the twist had me reeling! Literally. The way my brain immediately connected all the hidden gems throughout the book in the moment in rapid fire succession. It was so good! Then as soon as I started to come down from that emotional rollercoaster, the epilogue cliffhanger?!?! My jaw dropped!

I am beyond excited to experience the journey this trilogy takes me on and can’t wait to see how it ends!

Thank you NetGalley and G.P. Putnam’s Sons for this Advanced Readers Copy (ARC). All opinions are my own in this review. Dominion is expected to release July 2026.
Profile Image for crossedtree.
41 reviews1 follower
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
February 4, 2026
1.5⭐️

God the concept sounded so cool but 3 chapters in and I was over this book, halfway through and it wasn’t better. I finished it because of my stats but I was bored and annoyed and disappointed.

The end of every chapter ends on a 🎉cliffhanger🎉 that makes you want to keep reading more (debatable actually). I got sick of this. It was exhausting. If you have to use a ~powerful line~ at the end of every single chapter, the story is not intriguing enough to keep readers going. Which was true for me because the writing - not great, the story - meh, the characters - god, get me out of here.

Insta lust? Didn’t work for this story. The character names? Felt like Wattpad. Especially for there to be the same naming conventions for two different enough cultures that they each have Capital Names. The relationships? We’re told they exist and there isn’t much depth. Unless you count the mmc putting his dick into the fmc. Because WHY!!! Where is the yearning?? They’re hot and their tygers are hot for each other but why are the characters so into each other so early 😭

The tygers were cool. There was potential there. If the tygress wasn’t bonded to Rubi (aka Mary Sue with magic and amnesia), she would’ve been cool and the best character. She still probably is but the bar for good characters in this book is in hell.

The world building had really cool ideas and concepts that I wanted explored more. And maybe I’m just moving out of the romantasy sphere where I prefer more of the fantasy elements especially as that would’ve helped set up the twists at the end.

I will not be continuing this series.

Thank you to NetGalley and GP Putnam and Sons for the arc. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Saul Baisley.
192 reviews1 follower
February 22, 2026
This Asian inspired romantasy comes across as a cross between Avatar: The Last Airbender and Fourth Wing. That’s not to say I didn’t enjoy it, quite the opposite actual, I enjoyed it quite a bit. It has a lot of great world building and some deep characters.

A woman without a past and very little magic finds herself a refugee in a foreign land when her nation is invaded by demons. After crossing paths with the nations Tiger Rider captain and strongest metal magic user in the country, she is put in a position where she must bond to one of the magical tigers or die by their claws. However, when she surprises everyone by not only bonding, but bonding with the post powerful tyrgess queen of them all. But on the same day, a Devine being will foretell off the fall of the three remaining kingdoms if they nations can’t work together to restore the dimensional anchors that prevent the demons from entering the mortal realm. Promised with a having her memories returned if they are successful in restoring the anchors, she not only must only fight the creatures that desired her old home, but she must also come to terms with the ever increasing feelings she has towards the Tyger Rider captain and what that might entail.

This is a great story of adventure and a real zero to hero story. For those that look for spice in their romantasy novels, this is about on par with Fourth Wing to give you an idea. It has a deep history for both the characters involved and the world’s history as a whole. A unique magic system based on what nation the character is from and the Chinese zodiac brings an interesting flavor to the story. Fans of Asian inspired fantasy and romantasy novels will really enjoy this book
Profile Image for Robbie.
10 reviews
November 24, 2025
I want a Tygress. Who wouldn't? A magical beast that serves in the Silver Dominion but matches up through some mysterious method with humans. This story has politics, romance, people at the top of the society and people at the lowest point. There is magic, mischief, support, loss, and betrayal.

I enjoyed this story with the setup of different people with different powers, and the start of the book with a group who had lost their home. It provides a the structures of the society, more than one societal structure, and levels of importance and poverty. By why were the society's set as they are? Two are anti-women. Two are not. I enjoyed the romance of Rubi and Blake because most of their romance was Blake becoming more vulnerable and open. The mystery of Rubi's past didn't feel as meaningful as it was implied.

I enjoy Jean Kwok's work and the story flows well. I could have done without the sex scenes because in the end, they don't move the story. (Yes, I have the same complaint in the Fourth Wing. The sex scenes simply removed it from consideration for my high school students.)

My rating (3.5/5.0) is more for inconsistencies. What was the point of the Culling? It's so brief and we only see Rubi's experience, which was confusing. Then there is an issue of people chosen by Tygers. They are not necessarily good people. And, a possible doppelganger who also has a Tyger? How does the Tyger handle the change in person?

I needed more in the setup. I do wish to read the next one to see if it fills in the details.

Thank you to NetGalley and Putnam Books for providing an advanced copy.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
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