So conflicted, more so saddened after finishing this sequel to one of my most beloved dragon fantasies.
A Language of Dragons was beautiful. It balanced the themes of linguistics, fantasy elements, romance, and truly morally grey conflicts within every character. It was written with, what I felt, so much attention and care that it was so emotionally beautiful, and at times tragic. Yet, it all made me love the story more so.
Here, with A War of Wyverns, it’s the total opposite. This felt like reading Yarros’ Onyx Storm: A commercial sequel created for the purposes of financial gain that erased or changed everything that made the original so good only for fan service and additional sequels in the future. Within the first five to six chapters, all the consequences of the first volume that was meant to stay permanent and force our main character to grow from her pain——a story that would’ve been actually interesting and powerful as pain becomes strength——was thrown away. The entire time as I was reading, I was wondering what gravity did anything hold anymore? It not only ruined everything I felt and loved about A Language of Dragons, but also made me care so much less about A War of Wyverns. I was then disinterested and no longer attached.
The romance here felt forced. Every single moment the author could sneak some sort of romantic action in, it was pushed to the maximum as much as YA could get. Once again, forced romance ruined everything that was built up in A Language of Dragons. This repeated cycle continued throughout multiple aspects of this series I once loved . . . Now these parts are just reversed or abandoned.
A War of Wyverns has some redeeming qualities besides its failure to recapture emotional strength and plot tension. The world-building, lore, and variety of dragons grew vast. While the characters that returned were barely at the forefront, the background of the setting and history replaced them instead. I can tell where the story will go from here in a third volume, but the question is if it’s needed? Was this sequel even needed?
That’s for you as the reader to determine. Personally, and heartbreakingly, I will not be continuing the series after this.
Thank you to NetGalley and the author for providing an ARC (Advanced Readers Copy). This review is based off of an uncorrected proof.