The fourth installment of The Araneae Nation series by Hailey Edwards, a series I recently read and absolutely loved, is A Breath of Winter. This series started back in 2012 and was completed in 2014 (with some novellas not included in this review released up to 2017), so it's not a new one. I'd read 5 other series by Hailey Edwards (A Beginner's Guide to Necromancy, Black Hat Bureau, Black Dog, Gemini and her new series The Body Shop) before stumbling across this, so I thought I knew what to expect - good writing, good romance, decent low fantasy worldbuilding. But this blew me away.
The Araneae are a collection of clans, with a similar vibe to indigenous American and Canadian tribes, except that they are clearly related to spiders. Different clans have different anatomical, physiological and cultural adaptations - fangs and venom, spinnerets to create web, resistance to venom, differing levels of aggression, ritual cannibalism, fighting ability, hunting and scent tracking ability, craftsmanship, spiritual powers, inability to digest meat, the list goes on. It makes for a really diverse and interesting high fantasy world of different tribes. And of course, there's something not right in this fantasy world - spiders, meet plague. A plague that does more than they realise... and over the course of the series, we see this plot beautifully evolve around the individual stories of our main players.
This book features mercenary Zuri and our old friend Lourdes' scientist-healer brother Henri. And we're starting to really get a glimpse of what our heroes are up against in the series overarching plot line now - and it's looking pretty grim for them.
Of the five books in the series, this was my least favourite. I just didn’t connect with Zuri in the same way I had the other FMCs, and I didn’t find Henri a really compelling MMC. I didn’t like all the secrets he kept, and I just struggled to see why he was so attracted to Zuri, to be honest - mainly because she couldn’t see it, and we couldn’t see an alternative motivation for him. That relationship didn’t feel as well developed as the first two in the series, and with the plot device of locking in Zuri and her brothers due to plague risk, I just felt I was built up for more relationship development than I got - it was definitely more instalove this installment than good slow burn.
The overarching plot development felt slow and frustrating during the early part of the novel, then went from woah to go in 0-10 seconds in the last third. I actually couldn’t believe what was happening, and was totally gripped. I couldn’t see a way out of it that would work but oh my god it did. And it had me on the edge of my seat ready for the concluding installment.
This definitely was more okay and less great than the rest of the series, but some really important things happened and it definitely set us up well for the ending.