I love this story. I will not give any spoilers, so I will only write about what makes this story unique, in my opinion. I usually do not write reviews, but this book requires my attention.
First, I must say that Ms. Velez created a morally grey character that kept my attention throughout the story. The world-building is phenomenal. The author created an entire society. She constructed a corrupt religious church and a socioeconomic structure that follows a cast system. She did all into a fantasy world that resembles what is to me the late 1800 Europe. She created several kingdoms. And to top it all off, she merged magic alongside guns, trains, and prototype automobiles. All of this tugged in my fantasy lover's heart.
I have read many books in my 40-plus years, and this book is the real deal in a fantasy story. I devoured the book. I found it well written. The language made it fun and easy to read. I read it over a weekend.
I will deconstruct the story into pieces I think are important.
POV. The book starts from the First-Person Point of view, and the rest follows from a third-person omniscient. Most times, writing in a blended POV can be risky because there are writers who only like a third person and others who only like the first-person Point of view, but she merged them beautifully.
Wording. I'm not too fond of books with flowery words and overly constructed dialogue. In Calixta, the dialogue felt like it were regular every day people chatting. There were times when Calixta used highly educated language, which was expected in the scene based on her level of education. Spanish is my second language, and Italian is my third. I am glad to say they both helped me with some of the phrasings, which I thought made the character of Miomi sexy. Plus, this made the idea of different kingdoms with different languages more believable.
The characters. The author developed two great main characters. They kept a constant pace, and even the secondary characters had their moments to shine. There is one secondary character called Alesha, and I hope her story will be expanded in the sequel. One thing I didn't like was how quickly the male MC Dreyden changed his feelings for Calixta. However, I can see the man went from lust to a genuine appreciation of her.
Narrative. The narrative was outstanding. In the end, the narrative refers to the story being told. It is the account of events, experiences, and details. And this story is full of different imaginative accounts with added action and loads of adventure. Each book, to be successful, must have a strong beginning, a climax, and a satisfying resolution. And Calixta did not disappoint. At the start, the pace was a bit slow, but after chapter 6, the pace picked up and stayed at an excellent level. There were fighting scenes that added to the action. The chapters felt like a miny novel. Some had an introduction, a climax, and a point of conclusion, but most chapters kept you moving to the next chapter wanting more.
Plot. This story is a good vs. evil plot. However, it is also a romance. It has an enemy to lovers and marriage by convenience trope, among others. It is a story that does some moralizing about sex. However, I didn't care about that since, in the story, Calixta dies and goes to heaven. In heaven, she is told to follow the path to righteousness according to one of the religions. So, the whole moralizing premise is expected if the author created a religion based on Judeo-Christian beliefs. It has deep dark topics, and the author does present a nonconceptual sex act. Again, I will not add a spoiler; I only say these things because the author did mention these things in an author note with the book's blurb.
The setting. I must add that I wish she would have added more descriptions of the different settings and locations in the story. If you like description over dialogue, then you might not like this book because this author concentrates more on dialogue. However, her illustrations are to the Point and without extra flowery words, which I love. In my opinion, she gives the right amount of detail, but that is my taste.
Style. Many essential things get added together to make a writer's style. Some things are tone, word choice, grammar, language, descriptive technique, and a few others. Style is also what determines the mood of a story. So style is essential to distinguish one author from another, which is different by genre. Different types of story genres had different styles. Styles are different with each author, and Ms. Velez her style is unique. In the first chapter, I felt like the character was chatting with me, the reader. That is something I haven't seen yet. Each author has their style, and his one has one that, when united with her voice, makes me want to keep reading. Because tone indicates a particular feeling, I can't pinpoint one. It was a rollercoaster of emotions. If I were to give it a general tone, it would be a serious deconstruction of good vs. evil with an optimistic view in the end. I did find a few misspelled words but nothing that horrible. Her word choices were to the era that I felt the book portrayed, the late 1800s early 1900s Europe.
Emotions. I must say I went from angry, to crying, to happy for Calixta in a matter of chapters. This author can bring out feelings with ease.
So there you go. I deconstructed the story into what I think are the essential parts of a book without giving spoilers. I gave it 4.5 stars, so I rounded it to 5. I do recommend this book.
However, before you read it, do look at the trigger warnings.