Potential spoilers abound. You have been warned.
The premise of the book drew me in. Sky societies aren't something I happen upon often. Seraphim flight technology, rarer still. So I came into this book with medium expectations and intrigue, so not to become deflated. The world and religious aspects are fascinating, and my favorite bits by far. The power of Center and the surrounding islands' willingness to blindly follow them screamed eventual rebellion, but not immediate. The Seraphim Academies were a pleasant touch, demonstrating the process of forming defenses against rival nations. The red tape regarding duels and battles also removed some of the more barbaric tendencies and really drove home the control that Center has over the other islands. The setting, as a whole, was enjoyable.
Kael deserved more attention than he got. He was a character you could get behind. Not the most skilled, not the most outspoken, aware of his weakness and the last to pull the trigger, but still willing to stand up and fight in spite of all that. He's the nice guy of the story and easy to root for. He deserved the spotlight.
Bree. Just...Bree. I can't say more than that without my lid boiling over. Why can't we just name her what she is? Mary Sue. Where to begin? Okay, she's a natural risk-taker, and already great at flying because she's used the fishermen's wings a few times in the past (which the story points out are drastically different in maneuverability and function from seraphim wings). Other recruits into the academy are revealed to have experience with fishermen's wings, but only she gets recognition for her skill. She's dismissed from class for getting ahead of the rest, only to stumble upon an obstacle course and instantly impress another student years ahead of her. So she's already a fantastic flyer in her first year, "but wait!" you might say. "She's not a Mary Sue, because she struggles with her element of fire." Yes she does, for the majority of the book in fact. And so she focuses on swordplay, which the book points out on several occasions is a last resort for a seraphim who runs out of element. Certain characters express how they find it useless because a seraph without their element is essentially dead on the battle field.
So she sucks with her element, until she doesn't, because she finds a way to use her fire in a manner never before seen. This not only erases her previous (and only) flaw, but also warrants the attention of the greatest seraphim in the island's military, who makes it a point to give her the nickname "Phoenix" and instructs others to spread the word of her accolades to everyone on the island, that all may bask in her glory as an inexplicably gifted first-year student at the academy. Also, she's able to defeat an enemy, one on one, who has years more experience than her. As well as become the MVP of her very first battle against a rival island with no previous combat experience outside of training. Hell, in a battlefield where projectile weapons are the key to victory, she's able to fly close enough to enemies to slice them in half, unscathed. Everyone else in the story tells of how she's "born for the sky." Her recklessness is rewarded rather than reprimanded. When her personal actions are the sole cause of a battle where numerous allies DIE, no one...and I mean, not a single person...hold her accountable in the slightest, instead saying that "we stand by their own." So hey, be as reckless and ill-tempered as you want, because a seraphim supports the idiocy of his banner. Bree just has the most absurd degree of plot-armor that I've ever seen.
I liked Kael's disposition better, because he was actually advancing the plot. He was digging into the politics, the intrigue, the what-ifs and the whys. He showed genuine character development and flaws. Bree's story was all about why everybody loved her and how she had an unlimited get-out-of-jail-free card. An act that should've led to dishonorable discharge instead rallied the troops for reasons that will likely be explained in the next book. Because apparently Center also thinks that she's super special and shouldn't be punished for anything.
I'm reading the next book to see how the overall plot develops. At least this book accomplished that much. I've started reading as I am writing this review. And let me just say, the urge keep going diminished greatly in the first few pages. Because the greatest seraph in the military just had to sing to the heavens that Bree is the most important person world, all because her swords--which are a soldiers last resort, remember--light on fire.
Please put Bree on the sidelines. Please give Kael the helm. I really don't want to hear two more books decorate Bree in unearned praise. I'm calling it here, based on what I've read in this book alone: Bree will single-handedly deliver the final blow to Center's corrupt government, thus freeing the islands from their tyrannical grasp, as statues are constructed and songs written of her accomplishments, all the while she looks at the ground in flush-cheeked modestly, because she really doesn't see herself as a hero, just a simple girl who loves the sky.
In hindsight, I know this review was a bit...excessive. And again, I'd lighten up on it if Bree wasn't just so...darn...