In a world where gods and humans exist, a revolution happened twenty years ago by humans called the Guard. A revolution meant to kill every single god and half-god. Now only some of them are still there, and all the children left behind since then go to an orphanage where they being watched day and night for signs of them being gods. There are seven attributes that make a god, such as speed and strength, premonition, beauty, endurance, the ability to heal oneself, the silver of their blood or their demesne, which is the god's particular gift, while half-gods only have some of these seven. Their blood isn't always silver to begin with but will change color and be before they turn eighteen, which is why in the orphanage there is a blood test eighteen years after they were brought here. If their blood is red, they're free to go in the world, if it's silver, they're sent away to Elida, never to be seen again.
At the beginning of the story, we're following Hero, a half-god and Joshua, a god who just escaped from the orphanage — being the first ones to ever do that — as Joshua's blood test was coming closer, but sadly, Kestrel, a human and Hero's sister in everything but blood, who was supposed to escape with them, had been captured. So Hero and Joshua are going toward Elida to break her out. I found the beginning quite slow, but it soon speeds up as the two of them meet other gods part of the resistance and finally arrive to Elida.
The book is divided in three parts, the first one being narrated by Hero, then Raven, a ten years old shapeshifter girl from the resistance, and then Kestrel. I found myself loving all of these three girls (along with other characters), feeling for them and their troubles and doubts and fears. We could tell Raven was only ten by the way she was narrating, which I really liked. Everyone else made her a prodigy child, but she was still only a child and it showed.
The settings of the story were pretty dark, with the revolution, the resistance, all the fights, not a lot of hope, and ended with a kind of bittersweet ending but the characters still found some happiness at times with each other, and even some love (I was really surprised and happy to see a romance between two girls and even though I found their relationship a little rushed they were great together).
The relationships were also my favorite part of the book, all of them, especially Hero and Kestrel's. They loved each other so much and would do anything for the other and that's exactly the kind of relationship I love. They were always here to support and help the other. I loved that the main relationship of this story was a platonic one.
I was a little disappointed with the end, I think I wish the end was later, that we could know more about what they did after everything happened. Like I said, the ending was kind of bittersweet, outside I was smiling while reading the epilogue but inside I was just screaming. I wish we had more.
I received this book from Netgalley and Hodder & Stoughton in exchange for an honest review.