After being caught redhanded during her usual crime spree, Marian Stoke decides it's time to do A Good Thing to make up for it, such as stealing the executioner's ax to prevent a mostly innocent man from being killed the next day. But when her theft sets off dangerous and unforeseen consequences, Marian finds herself caught in a whirlwind of secretive thieves, an intoxicating new romance, and the evil schemes of the violent Prince, featuring plenty of snails.
This is a hard book to review, because its quality varied drastically throughout the book. On one hand, the world felt distinctly underdeveloped, there were a few grammar mistakes, the excitement wasn't very exciting, and for some reason there weren't page breaks when the narration switched to a different character. On the other hand, the writing style hit the perfect balance between smartass-sarcastic and endearing, it was genuinely funny, and there were a handful of passages that were pure genius to the point where I had to put the book down and reconsider exactly what I've been looking for in books this whole time. And that's not even touching on the fact that this book includes trans, gay, and POC characters in everything from major to background roles. So while I wish the world building was as unique as the writing style and that the characters were more fleshed out, Robins in the Night earns four stars, and I'm excited for whatever Dajo Jago writes next.