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Runebreaker

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Aelie can break runes with her bare hands—magic the fae built their entire world on. They hate her for it. Fear her for it. And when she's caught, they sentence her to die.

Desperate to survive, she shatters the rune enslaving Kairos, a devastatingly handsome fae executioner with a blood-soaked past.

Big mistake.

Kairos slaughters the court and drags Aelie to his breathtaking realm—a kingdom of towering forests and shimmering mists.

Bound to the ruthless king she freed, Aelie must navigate deadly fae politics, master her forbidden power, and resist the fae who sees her as his greatest weapon... and darkest obsession.

Runebreaker is a steamy, fast-paced romantasy with forced proximity, he-falls-first tension, and captive/captor dynamics perfect for adult fans of Jennifer L. Armentrout and Sarah J. Maas. It features a feral, morally gray hero, a soft girl with a dangerous gift, mating bond tension, and immersive world building. This is book #1 of a trilogy.

486 pages, Kindle Edition

Published January 1, 2026

1481 people are currently reading
1511 people want to read

About the author

Mila Finch

1 book47 followers
Mila Finch writes dark romantasy where morally grey characters make terrible decisions, magic breaks the world, and mating bonds complicate everything.

Her debut novel RUNEBREAKER released in January 2026.

When she's not writing about feral book boyfriends, she's reading about them. Based in the Pacific Northwest, she survives on coffee, rain-soaked inspiration, and the unshakeable belief that enemies-to-lovers is the superior trope.

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5 stars
1,088 (59%)
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181 (9%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 245 reviews
Profile Image for Haleigh.
55 reviews3 followers
Review of advance copy received from Author
December 24, 2025
I've been waiting in anticipation for his one since I found it. I was extremely excited for a rune-based fae book that centered on rune-breaking. Buuuuuut, in my opinion, this one is a toss up. Some things I liked. Some things I didn't.

Let's get the bad out of the way:

The biggest problem I had with this book was the pacing. All the scenes moved extremely fast, then we'd have an unexplained time jump (Amount of time unknown. I literally have no clue how long time-wise this book was. Days, weeks, months???? I mean maybe I missed it but with 400+ pages I'd expect at least a few "weeks went by" or "the days following" ,etc and I seriously don't recall many if any.) Anyways, unexplained time jump, and then it would just move onto the next scene. I guess overall, it just read extremely choppy. I wished there was a better flow to it.

I wasn't surprised by the ending. The writing is just too plain and straight forward. The author tells you everything you need to know. No guessing. The writing itself reads very YA, but this is definitely an adult book so it doesn't mesh.

It was kind of repetitive? They'd change the setting, but all the high-stakes scenes end almost identically. I could go into further detail with this, but don't want to spoil an unreleased book.

The world-building was minimal. We don't get a lot of history or information on the different aspects of society.

It's marketed as enemies to lovers, but they weren't ever enemies??? It was slow burn so I'll give it that but enemies? Definitely not. The relationship itself jumped all over the place too. They never spent one on one time with each other to grow the relationship, it was just a series of weird arguments? The stuff they were arguing about was happening way too early. You're arguing about her "belonging" to someone else and you haven't even kissed yet?? I just didn't get it. It happened more than once too. Just too much back and forth and not what I'd classify as "enemies".

Now onto what I liked:
I love rune magic, it's always super interesting. So having an FMC that is the ONLY one that can harness this power is especially cool. Extra points to having a sister with a unique gift too, even if we don't see her much.

I actually liked the secondary characters more than the main characters. UTHER? Yeah I'd read a book about him.

The plot was good, even if I saw the ending coming a mile away. It's definitely still entertaining enough.

We get really good history on our FMC's life. So she has good characters depth. Our MMC's depth comes towards the end.

Overall solid 3 star book. My negatives stem mainly from the writing style, which is a HUGE thing for me. It wasn't bad writing by any means, it's just not my particular taste. I think if you like SJM's earlier work you'll like this one. I happen to not be a fan of hers, but if you are perhaps you'll love this book.

***Thank you Mila Finch for this ARC. My review is voluntary and all thoughts and opinions are my own***
Profile Image for Megan.
286 reviews200 followers
January 21, 2026
DNF pg 101.

Life is too short
Profile Image for micolreads.
772 reviews63 followers
January 25, 2026
3,5 ⭐

The finale was just chef kiss.

Unfortunately I feel like this book was a bit confusing, world building was half explained and characters we definitely driving the book
15 reviews
January 21, 2026
⭐️⭐️.5

Runebreaker is one of those books that sounds excellent on paper and then slowly, page by page, tests your patience. The concept is compelling, but the story itself often felt like watching someone knowingly touch a hot stove and then act shocked when it burns.

The biggest hurdle for me was how casually the narrative handled destruction, death, and large-scale fallout. Massive events occur (burned villages, political collapse, floods/storms, merciless killing of innocents) yet the emotional weight of these moments barely registers before the story rushes off to the next plot beat or romantic encounter. The disconnect between what’s happening in the world and how the characters react to it made it hard to stay immersed.

That tonal imbalance becomes especially noticeable through the FMC’s decision-making, which often leans reckless rather than desperate or strategic. She repeatedly makes choices that endanger not just herself, but countless innocent people, and the story rarely pauses to let her (or the reader) fully grapple with the impact of those actions.

Mild spoilers below ‼️

It becomes outright was infuriating when breaks the storm gate, unleashing a flood that kills innocent people and destroys homes and businesses across the city. What disturbed me most wasn’t just the act itself, but her reaction (or lack thereof). She shows almost no guilt, and the devastation is quickly forgotten. Personally, if I had caused that level of destruction, even accidentally, I would be utterly devastated and riddled with guilt.

What makes this worse is that she does it again later in the book. Her line, “I destroyed a palace and probably killed a lot of people,” is such a lazy acknowledgement and is treated as a throwaway moment. Um… yes. You did. And that’s it? A serious lack of reflection and almost no accountability for her actions - born of negligence and stupidity, even if not malice - resulted in mass death. Moments later, it’s brushed aside entirely in favor of spicy time and a few paltry comments that she feels guilty. Seriously?

The world-building also felt thin and underdeveloped. We’re given very little background on the FMC, her sister, or how they ended up in their current circumstances. It also felt contradictory that they longed for freedom and a better life, yet were unwilling to leave Skalgard because of their desire to keep helping at the infirmary. That internal conflict was never meaningfully explored, nor why they didn’t just up and leave earlier (surely they had enough coin from all their supposed thievery).

There’s also a noticeable lack of originality. The familiar tropes pile up quickly: fae are evil and enslave mortals, the FMC hates fae as a result, she’s poor and starving, she meets a dark, feared fae known for killing mortals, he kidnaps her but turns out to be a misunderstood good guy, showers her with food and clothing that she initially refuses out of pride, her assumptions about the fae all being bad are proven wrong, and she plots an escape despite how obviously impossible it is. The similarities to ACOTAR are hard to ignore.

The characters themselves felt flat and one-dimensional, lacking depth or distinctive personalities. The romance is more of a medium burn, and while I didn’t mind that the MMC was clearly infatuated early on, their interactions lacked emotional substance. Much of their dialogue consists of short, shallow exchanges that failed to evoke any real feeling. The romantic progression felt abrupt - by around 40%, he’s talking about worshipping her, despite there being virtually no emotional build-up to justify it.

I also felt no emotional connection to the FMC’s sister. We’re told repeatedly how important she is, but we barely get to know her. As a result, the FMC’s desperation to return to her and keep her safe fell flat - I simply didn’t care. There was far too much telling us about her sister and not nearly enough showing to make that bond feel real.

Certain character dynamics also made little sense, for example, Elwen, the master healer and a warrior who effectively ruled in the MMC’s absence for a century, inexplicably acts as a handmaid to the FMC, dressing her and bringing her food. It felt bizarre given her station and responsibilities.

This may be personal preference, but I’m also not a fan of the MMC’s “burn the world down for her” trope, especially when paired with nonsensical political decision-making. Entire villages are destroyed, alliances crumble, storms and tsunamis wipe people out, and war looms - yet there’s almost no strategic thinking or concern for maintaining peace. The blasé attitude toward mass destruction was deeply unsettling. One moment characters are having sex, the next an entire village is burned down, with very little acknowledgment of the horror.

Overall, Runebreaker had potential, but weak character development, thin world-building, recycled tropes, and a troubling disregard for consequence made this a disappointing read for me. I almost feel bad listing so many issues, but they genuinely kept stacking up as I read - every time I thought we might turn a corner, another problem appeared. While the final 10% did pick up and gave me a glimpse of what the story could have been, it wasn’t enough to outweigh everything that came before it.
Profile Image for Natalie Gaines.
264 reviews3 followers
January 25, 2026
Ultimately I’m trying to not be scathing in this review as I believe runebreaker is self published. It’s not offensively bad, but also it’s not particularly good.

Pros include: MC looks like Sephiroth, good gore, Uther as a character (love him), moments of flowery prose.

Cons: While there is a concept of a plan, execution is wanting. FMC makes insanely bad decisions then “oops” it each time. GIRL!!! STOP!!! NEOW!! Like she has the nuke codes - TAKE THEM BACK!!! Also has chat gpt fated mates plot and I’m not going to mark this as a spoiler bc it’s very obvious from page 5.

All that to say I kinda approached this like an a03 reading; in that sense it has merit. At the end of the day there are genuinely enjoyable moments. I think if this got through a publisher with a good editor it could be quite big. As it stands, I’m not sure if it’s up to snuff for even booktok. but then again, everyone was fine w fourth wing.
Profile Image for Angie.
364 reviews16 followers
January 13, 2026
Predictable

I'm not sure if this is this others first book but it feels like it. The first half of the book has too many minor plot holes for me to give this a better rating. I'm not sure if I'll read book 2, this one was a little too predictable. This author has potential but I don't see the same hype from other reviews.
32 reviews
December 29, 2025
I was chosen for an ARC reader for this book, so thank you to the author. Solid 4.5. I LOVED it. It was slow to get into in the beginning few chapters but when it took off it took off and it was a great story.

Ummm the cliffhanger, excuse me?!?! And the next book isn’t available for preorder even!!

The FMC grew through this book and found her strength in herself but to believe and rely on others. The MMC broody, morally grey, touched her and die, who did this to you, “mine” everything I love. The spice spiced but it wasn’t overshadowing the plot, the plot and story were there also. The side characters were a good time, one was morally gray also and he was my favorite. The villain was written well and you just wanted to throw him off a cliff!

At the end of it, do I recommend, yes I do. Am I going to read the next book when it comes out. Yes I will. I devoured this book.
Profile Image for Sam.
19 reviews
December 23, 2025
[⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️]

I was extremely lucky to be an ARC reader, so thank you so much to Mila 💕 I want to start by saying this book genuinely got me out of my reading slump — I would have finished it in one sitting if I didn’t have to work.

Runebreaker is about a human girl living in a fae-dominated world who has the power to (you guessed it) break runes. Humans aren’t supposed to have magic, but here she is anyway. Her sister also has an ability, though we don’t see much of it in this book. The story follows Aelie, who starts out as a servant in a noble cleric household alongside her sister. They steal to survive and to help other poor humans they know — until one bad break-in lands Aelie on the path to execution.

Except she breaks the rune binding the executioner to the current king. Once freed, he slaughters everyone and kidnaps Aelie. From there it’s enemies-to-lovers, and it absolutely did not disappoint. I really liked how some things were hinted at early on but not fully revealed until later, and the pacing felt right to me. Even without clear time markers, everything felt natural and believable.

The writing was wonderful. While there isn’t a massive amount of worldbuilding, enough is revealed as the story goes on that you always know what’s happening — but not so much that it ruins the mystery. It definitely left me desperate for more.

Overall, I loved this book and I cannot wait for the second one. I’m already dying to see where it picks up and what happens to these characters.

I only have two regrets: picking this up as an ARC, because now I have to wait for the rest of the trilogy, and finishing the book while my fiancé sat next to me scrolling TikTok. How am I supposed to explain the crying, the laughing, and the dramatic pearl-clutching?
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Gerbera_Reads.
1,704 reviews155 followers
January 21, 2026
It was not bad. I liked the writing style and the MMC. The FMC was annoying during the first half of the book but she redeemed herself later. Another thing was that there were too many plot holes in the first part. I liked the second 50% of the story though. Kairos was a fabulous morally grey MMC, and his best friend Uther was the chef's kiss. I liked the world building and the secondary characters as well. I will read the next one when it comes out.
Profile Image for Kelly Oram.
Author 33 books4,378 followers
February 5, 2026
Love everything about it!

I haven’t enjoyed a book this much in a long time. It sucked me in from the first chapter and it’ll stay with me for a long time. Loved the characters and the evolution of their relationships. Love the world Mika has created. Seriously, I loved everything about this book. Holding my breath for the next one! Excellent job Ms Finch!
Profile Image for Rachel L..
7 reviews
January 4, 2026
Overall, I enjoyed this book. The story itself was engaging, and while it leans into the familiar enemies-to-lovers-who-are-actually-fated-mates trope, it had enough unique elements to keep it interesting. The worldbuilding and magic system were intriguing, but the writing style is where the book lost points for me.
Much of the writing felt surface-level, and I often found myself wishing it would dig deeper. Some characters came across as flat, and moments that felt like they should have been emotionally or narratively significant passed too quickly without much exploration. At times, character motivations felt underdeveloped or unrealistic. Not because the story choices themselves felt wrong, but because their internal worlds weren’t fully explored.
As a result, I struggled to fully immerse myself in the story, even though I still found it enjoyable overall.
Profile Image for Heather.
583 reviews
January 12, 2026
Bound Fae executioner falls for rune breaker

Wow. 🤯 kind of still processing this book. I believe this is an indie author and I have to say this is really good.

I know this is a trilogy. I was hoping it would be interconnected standalone books because too many series usually get dragged out and sometimes the story just declines the longer it goes.

Aelie meets Kairos (the executioner) when she’s caught stealing. He warns her and lets her go.

When you talk about morally gray men he’s that. He’d burn everything for her. She holds back and he tells her how much he needs her.

There’s lots of magic, some battles, and Dragons trying to get free.

The romance is… well I don’t want to say slow burn.. there’s lots of yearning. Then some mild spice. Just 1/2 full scenes towards end.

There’s fated mates

Manipulative ex (Varus) the prince

Sisters who love each other fiercely (Rehya)

I was hoping the next book would be uther(the Dresden) I think they’re called. Like vampires. And her sister Reyha. But it looks like this story will continue with kairos and Aelie.

The pacing in this book was decent. The FMC could be annoying at times. Some things felt slightly redundant, but overall it was a good book.



Profile Image for BigRed.
67 reviews1 follower
January 24, 2026
Super interesting world and magic system. A human with random magic that can do something none of the ruling fae can. A douche fae ex with big fuck boy energy and a moody and misunderstood fae MMC. The only downer was that everybody IN the book and READING the book knew this was about fated mates and yet the FMC was painfully oblivious. Nevertheless I was entertained and invested the whole way through (4.5 stars rounded up) ✨
895 reviews19 followers
January 28, 2026
DNF.

I honestly feel bad about it, because I can see that there is potential but it just fell short for me, and the writing style feels choppy and I could not get into it, I am honestly just writing a review so I remember I didn't like it if I ever come back to it because the blurb had me sold.
18 reviews
January 18, 2026
not worth it

The plot had such great promise but there was so much word salad that it just got lost. Not to mention the FMC was just too slow. I wanted to like her but she just kept making the same mistakes over and over again. And will just whine and state she didn’t mean it. I ended up skimming a lot of it just to get to the end that was obviously coming. I will not be reading the next book.
Profile Image for Sarah.
201 reviews54 followers
January 25, 2026
Enjoyment - ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Writing - ⭐⭐⭐

I want more world building. I want more slow burn. I want more. Just more. 

The writing was fine. There were some inconsistencies and areas I think could have been better written, but oh boy was I invested. I haven't read a book this fast in a looooong time.
6 reviews
January 29, 2026
Fantastic!

The ending *chef's kiss* Mila is a wonderful world and character builder. Looking forward to her next book in this series.
Profile Image for Becca.
Author 33 books268 followers
January 8, 2026
Phenomenal!

I loved this book. It's a refreshing take into the genre. And I devoured it. I'm foaming at the mouth for the next book in the series and hoping that we will be seeing more of different side characters.

If you love romantasy I think you'll adore this. I don't want to give anything away because it's best enjoyed going in slightly blind in my opinion. But damn. Yeah I will be following this author. Amazing work.
Profile Image for Smut Goblin .
186 reviews4 followers
January 7, 2026
This book grabbed me by the throat and reminded me why I will always come back to romantasy with sharp edges and feral men.

Aelie can break runes with her bare hands — the very magic the fae built their entire world on. That alone makes her a walking apocalypse. So of course they fear her. Of course they sentence her to die. And of course, in a last act of survival, she frees the worst possible man she could’ve chosen.

Kairos is a rune-bound executioner. A king enslaved. A weapon forged out of centuries of blood, rage, and restraint — and the moment his chains snap, he turns blade and mist on everyone in the room.. He doesn’t hesitate. He doesn’t look back. He just takes Aelie and disappears into his mist-drowned kingdom like a force of nature reclaiming what’s his.

What follows is pure romantasy catnip.

Forced proximity. Constant tension. Mutual loathing that curdles into obsession. Kairos is deadly to everyone except her — and even then, he’s barely holding himself back. He’s toxic. He’s possessive. He’s feral. And he falls first in a way that feels inevitable and terrifying.

Meanwhile, Aelie is soft and human but never weak — relentlessly brave, fiercely determined, and willing to nearly destroy herself to save others.

The magic system deserves its own praise. Runes are everywhere — woven into locks, weapons, blood, protection, domination — which means the ability to break them is world-ending. Every choice has consequences, every spell feels costly, and the political manipulation layered throughout the story is ruthless. Betrayals hit hard, alliances rot from the inside out, and each reveal tightens the noose until everything feels one breath away from collapse.

And the romance?
Unhinged.

Slow burn that erupts.
Open-door. Filthy. Charged.

Kairos doesn’t just wield power — he is power. His mist magic moves like hands, like fingers, like living shadows that obey his will. He can crush a man’s throat without ever touching them… and he uses that same magic with Aelie in ways that are intimate, possessive, and devastatingly hot. The contrast between how lethal he is to the world and how reverent he is with her absolutely ruined me.

This is peak “touch her and die” energy.
“I will destroy the world for you” energy.

There is a declaration of love in this book that genuinely stopped me in my tracks — raw, reverent, and devastating ... followed shortly by a cliffhanger so cruel I had to stare at the page in silence.

Runebreaker is thrilling, sexy, swoon-worthy, and unhinged in the best way. It’s about survival, forbidden power, and what happens when a woman marked as a threat becomes the weakness of a man forged for blood and ruin.

I am obsessed. I am feral. And I am absolutely not emotionally prepared for book two — but I need it like I need air.
Profile Image for Taylor Sheppard.
174 reviews2 followers
January 2, 2026
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

“There was something magnetic in his rawness. He didn’t soften himself to be palatable. Didn’t care who was watching. Beneath the feral edge was a steadiness that made me feel safe—and a male who still noticed beauty in the world after a hundred years of chains.”

A lush romantasy with resilient characters, a morally gray MMC, and sisters who could change the world as they know it.

Runebreaker follows Aelie, a servant among the fae hiding a deadly secret—she’s a Runebreaker, able to shatter the very magic the fae used to build their world. When she’s caught using her powers, Aelie is sentenced to death. Her only chance at survival is to break the rune enslaving the king’s executioner. But things don’t go to plan when the executioner, Kairos, not only slaughters the court but kidnaps Aelie and drags her back to his home. Forced to navigate her new circumstances while resisting those who want to use her as a weapon, Aelie must rely on everything she has to survive.

I’m a huge sucker for darker romantasy, and Runebreaker delivers perfectly. Kairos is deeply morally gray, political intrigue and betrayal lurk around every corner, and the forced proximity only heightens the tension. The magic system is unique and fascinating—I loved watching how it unfolds, especially as Aelie learns more about her ability to break runes. Kairos and Aelie are compelling leads, and their banter was everything.

The side characters were equally intriguing, and based on that ending, I’m desperately hoping for future side stories. And yes—another cliffhanger. Yes—I need book two immediately. My heart cannot take what it was put through. I don’t even need things to be okay… I just need to know.

Tropes: fae · dragons · forced proximity · possessive/territorial MMC · he falls first

Highly recommend for romantasy lovers, especially those who enjoy darker elements, spicy moments, and captivating characters.

Get your own copy now!

Thank you to the author for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for lula anna .
426 reviews1 follower
January 27, 2026
2 generous ⭐️.

I wanted to love this book. The premise sounded interesting. I’m trying to give the benefit of the doubt and in the nicest way possible say that this was not good (for me, IMO. Others may love.)

This ended up being like a copy and paste of every other romantic fantasy with the overuse of a very common and overused trope (obvious from the first 50 pages). Insta love/lust instead of actually developing relationships.. That trope is not an excuse to forgo actual character and relationship development. The FMC was very frustrating, immature, and not so bright. I didn’t care for the MMC either. I felt no connection with any of the characters, though. They were one dimensional and very flat.

So many horrible things happened in this book that should have felt traumatic, but it lacked any emotional depth so I felt nothing. A horrific act would happen and the story would just move along. There was very little world building if any. Unfortunately, this book was predictable and repetitive almost from page one. I ended up skimming a majority of the book just to get to the end I knew was coming.

The formatting of this book was also very odd. Huge gaps between paragraphs. Some would just be one line and be several pages of one liners. I think this book would really benefit from a good editor. I went in not expecting much but was still disappointed. I guess I’m tired of romantic fantasy authors wasting relatively unique ideas by using overused, basic romantic fantasy templates and tropes. Sometimes I can ignore that and just vibe with a book if it has good romance, spice, or plot, but in my personal opinion, this book did not have any of those things. The premise had potential and I think it just felt prey to popular recycled plots/tropes.

Unfortunately, I would not recommend and will not be reading book 2 even though it ends on a cliffhanger (very similar to a very popular romantasy 😒😬)

2 🌶️ (as a spice fan, I did not enjoy)

* please disregard grammatical errors due to accessible voice texting. Thanks.
Profile Image for Jenna.
17 reviews
January 23, 2026
This book was incredible. I loved it. It incorporated so many elements I love within the fantasy genre. I love the FMC. I love the MMC. This story is similar to some mainstream books I’ve read, in a lot of ways it’s giving ACOTAR. I read this for 5 hours straight and made myself stay up WAY too late on a work night.

Something that breaks my heart about the ending is that Kairos doesn’t even get to tell Aelie that they are mates. And then for Vaeris to demand she break the mating bond? Ugh it’s giving the scene in ACOTAR when the King tries to make Feyre do it with Rhys. I like that they found a way out of it but I hate that the thread she has to break is their ability to communicate and locate each other. I hope this story is similar to the Gild series in this way, where they are able to get it back. Also, I totally predicted that something was going to happen between Rheya and Uther. Just saying!!!!!

I really love their love story. Even though it’s from Aelie’s perspective, you can really see things from Kairos’ perspective as well because of how their interactions are written. I think I like that better than in other books where you can tell they like the FMC but they are so shut down and we don’t get anything until later in the book or when we get the MMC’s perspective.

Definitely going to be raving about this book to my friends and I am *very* upset that I didn’t check if this series was completed. I know the author is writing the next book but I do not do well with waiting!!! I’m doing myself a favor and writing this review to motivate me to read the next book when it comes out. I know authors love to write ridiculously long series for the money and other reasons but I’m hoping that this is a duology or trilogy at most.

Overall, incredible book. I love the pace of the book, the characters, and the plot. I am not happy about the cliff hanger ending with the second book not being written. Can we all start boycotting books with cliff hanger endings??
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Chantelle.
443 reviews4 followers
January 28, 2026
Good start

It was refreshing to have an MFC who actually has a backbone. Fool me once and we’re done. No second chances after betrayal, no falling for obvious lies or sweet talk. That kind of maturity feels rare in female characters, and I was genuinely glad there wasn’t some unnecessary love triangle dragged in for drama.


Uther, meanwhile, was an absolute delight. Nearly every scene he’s in made me laugh. He was easily one of the most entertaining and well-written characters in the book, and honestly stole the show. Despite how much I liked him, he was as artificial as the rest of the cast. I just wish They had been given more depth. 


A lot happens in this book. Maybe too much. I liked the overall story, the romance, and the relatively low drama, but the pacing was so fast that there wasn’t much room for explanation. Feuds, politics, history, and world-building were touched on but never fully explored, which left me constantly wanting more context. The story never really slows down long enough to let those elements breathe.


The writing itself was also uneven at times. There were several moments where I had to stop and reread paragraphs just to understand what was happening or being said. The romance moved very quickly. Not quite insta-love, but close. Given how much occurs between the characters, I expected to feel more emotionally invested than I did, and that disconnect says a lot about the execution.


Overall, I like the book but I don't feel myself needing to read book 2. This was a solid 3 to 3.5 stars for me. The foundation is strong, but the story needed more depth and development to really shine. The bones are there, I just wish they had more meat on them. Then again, that might have turned this into an 800-page book, so maybe this was the trade-off.
Profile Image for Tiegan | Bookstagram.
75 reviews1 follower
January 14, 2026
This book is basically… Aelie and her sister have unusual powers (Aelie can break runes and her sister can amplify them) and they use these powers to steal from the wealthy people of their city so they can get everything they need to survive. But then Aelie gets caught, is sentenced to death at the hands of an infamous fae executioner, escapes after releasing him from runic “chains”, and then gets embroiled in violence and fae politics… In between enjoying super spicy sex with like the hottest fictional executioner dude ever 😂

Tropes:
🐉 Dragons
🩵 Fae
🐉 Enemies to lovers
🩵 Forbidden magic
🐉 Touch her and die
🩵 Forced proximity
🐉 Fated mates

That summary may be under-selling this book juuuust smidge 👌😂

Things I loved about it?
❤️ I enjoyed Aelie’s rune-breaking ability— pretty unique in the romantasy genre.
💙 Uther was also a super endearing secondary character and I could see him being Aelie’s best guy friend ever…. but at the same time him platonically calling her “love” was super hot 😂 What is wrong with me lol
❤️ Mila has a special talent for writing battle scenes, explosions, and emotional violence 😭
💙 Anyone who knows me would also know I love a good romantic love confession… and Mila realllly delivered on that front 😍

Things I didn’t love… 🤔
❤️ There was something of a plot twist at the 70% mark that felt pretty random… Almost like the subtle hints leading up to it were a little too subtle, and the author actually threw in the idea without planning backwards first.
💙 And the ending, while hitting me real hard in the feels (gave me the emotional chest pain lol), it wouldn’t have come to pass if Aelie had some sense 🙄 Iykyk

But I enjoyed it immensely and will be reading the sequels on KU… like DUH. Lol.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Amanda Stone.
31 reviews4 followers
January 19, 2026
I slept zero hours and regret nothing!

I devoured this book like a dragon guarding treasure. I opened it “just to start” and somehow the sun came up before I closed it. Less than 24 hours, zero regrets.
Runebreaker is everything I want from romantasy: sharp magic, feral tension, ruthless fae politics, and a romance that burns hot and dangerous. Aelie is the kind of heroine who instantly earns your loyalty. She can literally break the magic that holds the fae world together with her bare hands, and instead of being worshipped, she’s hunted. Watching her go from condemned to deadly to indispensable is wildly satisfying.
And Kairos. Whew. Morally gray does not even begin to cover it. Executioner. King. Obsession wrapped in violence and devotion. The he-falls-first energy is immaculate, the forced proximity crackles, and the captive-captor dynamic is done in a way that feels intense, dangerous, and impossible to look away from. Their chemistry is unhinged in the best way.
The world building is immersive without slowing the pace. Towering forests, shimmering mists, blood-soaked courts, and dragons lurking in the background like promises. Every chapter pulls you deeper, and the spice is perfectly balanced with plot, not just heat for heat’s sake.
If you love fast-paced fantasy romance, mating bond tension, ruthless fae kings, and heroines with forbidden power, Runebreaker needs to be at the top of your list. Book one ends with your heart racing and your soul screaming for the rest of the trilogy. I am feral for what comes next.
Profile Image for Mel Weisbecker.
190 reviews9 followers
January 5, 2026
🧝🏻‍♀️ Fae and humans
⛓️‍💥 Fated mates
🧝🏻‍♀️ One bed
⛓️‍💥 Runic magic system
🧝🏻‍♀️ Book 1

Characters: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️/5
Plot: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️/5
Spice: 🌶️🌶️/5
Overall: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️✨/5

I don't even have WORDS!

This was a wild ride. Mila did a beautiful job of introducing us to this beautiful, broken world and the different creatures that inhabit it.

"You honor the dead by enduring, my princess. By refusing to let their sacrifice stop you."

I didn't expect to fall so hard and fast for Aelie and her younger sister Rheya. It pulled at my elder sister heart strings and I understood Aelie's reason for the things she did instantaneously.

"You have to stop destroying yourself for makes who don't deserve it."

And do not even get me started on our MMC... I don't want to give away who it is but he is everything you need in a book boyfriend. Actually he is book HUSBAND material.

"I will not watch her bleed to satisfy your curiosity."

There were so many twists I didn't see coming and some things I could see a million miles away but that part didn't take away from the story at all. It just set us up for even more PAIN in book 2!!

If you read this because of me you must sign a waiver releasing me of any emotional liability or future therapy bills. It's the rules.

Thank you Mila Finch for my advance reader copy! This is my honest and unbiased review.
Profile Image for scottiethegpreads.
50 reviews
January 25, 2026
Entertaining, Intriguing but Surface Level Writing

I was so entertained! Rune breaker is an exciting & intriguing, fast paced romantasy with forced proximity, mating bond tension, Fae and humans, slow burn to spice, forbidden magic, blood soaked morally gray MMC (Kairos), & a 25-year-old heroine with dangerous magic (Aelie). It is an action packed adventure with tons of chaos, unique world building & plot, and surprising plot twists. The slow burn is full of angst & tension (Kairos has a very dirty mouth). Ends on a cruel cliffhanger. Its 1st person & single POV. This is the first in a trilogy.

3.5/4 stars ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️//🌶️🌶️//☠️☠️☠️/⚠️

This book is so close to being great. The biggest problem with this book is the writing style. Everything is very surface level, from the magic system, character relationships, depth, & decisons, and in general what is going on. From page one we skip from storyline to storyline at a rapid rate (almost like whiplash). There's zero depth in any of the side characters, which is disappointing because some of them could be so entertaining. There's zero banter. the character motivations are undeveloped because there's minimal internal dialogue. I was often wishing I had more information about the magic the Fae possessed & how it worked. I gave this a higher rating solely bc I was intrigued AF and highly entertained
Profile Image for Lovelettelore.
153 reviews2 followers
December 27, 2025
🔥 She broke the one rune no one was ever meant to touch—and bound herself to a king drenched in blood.

📖 Runebreaker by Mila Finch
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️.25
🌶️🌶️🌶️
Romantasy

Tropes:
💥 Forbidden magic
⚔️ Enemies to lovers
🐉 Ancient creatures awakening
🛡️ Touch her and 💀
⛓️ Forced proximity
🩸 Mating bond tension

Aelie and her sister were born with forbidden magic—but Aelie’s ability is unheard of. She can break runes, something neither fae nor human has ever survived doing. When she’s caught, the king sentences her to death. Faced with execution, Aelie chooses survival and shatters the rune enslaving Kairos—a ruthless, blood-soaked king feared across the realms. Bound to him by magic and circumstance, Aelie must navigate deadly fae politics, the limits of her power, and the dangerous pull of the very king she freed.

This book hooked me immediately. From the first chapter, Aelie felt layered and real—her fear, determination, and desperation all made sense. I understood her choices, even the reckless ones, which made it easy to sink fully into her story.

The plot was immersive in the best way. It felt familiar enough to be comforting—FMC with rare, dangerous magic—but still fresh in how it unfolded. Kairos is everything I want in a morally grey MMC: ruthless to everyone else, fiercely protective of her, and completely unapologetic about it. The way he provides for her, shields her, and quietly claims her without hesitation? Chef’s kiss.

I lost track of reality while reading this, which is always the best compliment I can give. I’m absolutely looking forward to continuing this series.

Thank you Mila Finch for this ARC!
Profile Image for Tiana.
272 reviews58 followers
January 10, 2026
The human fmc being the one that can break runes is cool, and the fact that she is doing it to try and help the rest of the humans in this city makes her pretty likeable too. I feel like it's pretty strange in these kinds of fantasy books for a human character who has powers that no one else does to not be selfish, so it is kinda like a breath of fresh air.

This was quite an easy read, and I flew threw it very quick. it was kinda boring in the middle when there was just lots of info dumping and set up for what was going to happen later on in the book and rest of the series, but once all of that was out of the way i really did enjoy it, and i already can't wait to see what happens in the rest of the books.
I will say that it was so obvious that they were mates right from the beginning, and right from when he starts to treat her differently. Seemed a bit pointless that it would be something revealed right at the end, but also i totally get it.
having it end the way that it did was actually a lot of fun, and I thought that the loophole they found for breaking their mating connection was so good! I already know that its going to set up a lot of really cool things to happen in the next book
The only thing i wish was that we saw more of THE DRAGONS!!!
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