"For fans of Red Queen, the Grishaverse, and Avatar the Last Airbender..."
I can see Red Queen, I can see Avatar just as a passing resemblance, but for the life of me, I cannot see Grishaverse. That people have powers? They are both fantasy? There are kingdoms? Maybe?
Either way, the resemblance to Red Queen is uncanny to the point it feels as a copy of a different version. You have the poor, little girl who lived in the worst place and no one could have powers from there and not only that, but of course she has extraordinary affinity to said powers. It deviates from Red Queen's story as Talise joins without hiding her identity to the academy, where she meets friends but also an interesting male rival. It is fairly obvious though, how Talise will change the world, just like Mare.
Based on the structure of the series, which is divided in 12 books of ~100 pages, I did not expect a lot, but something easy to pass the time. And that is what you get. World building is adequate, story is still a fledgling, characters are very two dimensional and lastly, writing is sorely lacking.
Relatability comes and goes pretty fast and Aaden, the mysterious rich boy, is a very annoying character surprisingly. I say surprisingly because we barely really see him talk, but in almost every scene manages to act like 12 years old. Actually, I had to remind myself while reading this book that the characters were around 17-18 years old and did not start puberty right then and there.
Either way, my rating might be a bit low as 2.5 stars would be more accurate but "ok" is the word that would describe the book best. It is an ok effort for a start and I sincerely hope the writing becomes more natural, because as it stands, characters are always at the right time however much time passes and the deus ex machina slowly creep up.