*Possible Spoilers*
As an avid reader of Fantasy, I read a few hundred books a year specifically in this genre, and for the most part, I look for the most action-packed books with as little romance as possible, but, as anyone who has read this book will surely know, Blade & Rose is not one of these books.
Despite knowing this when I started reading, I decided to give it a chance regardless—hidden gem and all that.
There are a lot of things I loved, and hated, about this book.
For one, I loved the magical aspects of the book. Characters having Anima, descending into feurer, and the way that the overall magical system is built up is something I really enjoyed. Many fantasy books have the tendency to overpower a main character, or magic in general, by giving them all these incredible ‘gifts’ and none of the setbacks that come with them. Blade & Rose did not do this. With the concept of Anima, and the risk of feurer to follow when a mage’s Anima is depleted, I really loved the way that the risks and the power balanced one another out. However, in the exact same breath Rielle, the main character, is never really at risk of Anima-depletion. There’s always a source of power ready for her, and it’s massively annoying because there is never really any risk—yes her anger let’s her almost go into feurer, but somehow she always has someone to bring her back from that. She can instantly heal her wounds, set fire to herself to stop flying arrows, and somehow combats magic-resistant characters with, you guessed it, magic.
In terms of tension, this book has very little of it.
To top this off, the romance in the novel doesn’t have any backbone, it’s literally just insta-love. Rielle, is ‘damaged’ by her betrothed, betrayed by her ex-teacher/lover, and somehow, despite all this, manages to fall in love with a ‘forbidden’ paladin in a week. The author went through a lot of trouble to set up the story about how all of her previous love affairs failed, and about how Rielle can never trust again, and yet ruins what could be an incredible romance build-up by, essentially, forcing the characters together.
Rielle continues to whine about the tragedy in her past, but refuses to work beyond it, Brennnan is a manipulative asshole who, essentially, physically and mentally abuses Rielle, but at the first show of ‘kindness’ from him seemingly forgives him. Instantly. And Jon never asks any questions. He’s so loyal to his order that he insists on being reinstated immediately without even a small desire to find out why he was excommunicated in the first place. His morals are strong until one person mentions that, maybe, he’s better off not being a paladin anyway. What does he do? After years of remaining loyal to his vows and his order?
He screws someone he met a week before.
This was a really long book, but honestly most of it can be summarized in one line---
Girl meets forbidden virgin boy, forbidden virgin boy falls in love with said girl, and they fuck. The end.
This book had a lot of potential, with what could’ve been a good plot, an awesome magic system, and potentially decent characters, but the instant love and overall lack of tension just really ruined it for me.
I think in the 74 chapters I read, a lot more could’ve happened to keep me interested. I did finish nonetheless, but I will not be reading on.
Which is sad because those covers are absolutely gorgeous.