4.5 stars, rounding up because I cried a few times (two of which were near the end), and the ending is just full of hope and a continued sense of adventure.
After Red Tigress, which I didn’t love as much as Blood Heir, I was a bit wary of how the conclusion to this trilogy would pan out. For me, at least, Crimson Reign was a satisfying conclusion to this series that wrapped up all the loose ends and felt really peaceful and warm, instilling a sense of hope and joy and just making me smile. I’m so happy to see Ramson and Ana get their HEA together; it’s been a long time coming (and considering the aggravation their angst caused me in book two that continued into this book, I was pleased to see Ramson become a complete Ana supporter in this book. I love Ramson so much. Even when Ana irritated me with her need to push Ramson away for fear of hurting him more with her likely death, Ramson stuck around and went after her to help her and save her so they could reach that happy ending.). I think Ramson and Linn made this book better than it would have been without them.
Speaking of Linn, I loved getting to see more of her own journey, and her finding her purpose and drive to keep fighting for what’s good and to better the world warmed my heart. Linn’s been a solid character from the start, and while I’m the type of person who gets annoyed by the POV switches by chapter when one scene on one character’s end gets left on a bit of a cliffhanger because I just want to know what happens!, overall I really liked having her explore what it meant to be a Kemeiran in Cyrilia, at the hands of Affinite traffickers, who obtained her freedom and lived a hard life and doesn’t always feel as Kemeiran as she could be through no fault of her own (the immigrant/child of immigrant experience right there). I also loved that Linn’s character is the one Amélie Wen Zhao got to write who looks like her (and me as a Chinese American) and whose country of Kemeira is a strong nod to her home country. I loved the aspects of Chinese culture, the mentions of yin and yang, of the concept of yuan, the threads of fate, even respect of elders and such for all of the familiarity and embrace of her roots. And her relationship with Kaïs, the fact that it’s left open ended in terms of whether it’s platonic or romantic, all of it, I loved. The fact that they recognize each other as kindred spirits, warrior souls who haven’t always had the freedom and choices that they do in this final book.
I loved what we got of Kaïs too, and I’m so happy he got to reunite with his mother. That made me a bit teary. I’m glad Shamaïra was okay in the end and that her fierce spirit hasn’t dimmed a bit. And she finally gets to go home. And Kaïs will get to visit, I’m sure.
All the character deaths (minus the villains’, though I did pity Sorsha for having been made into this monster by their dad…) hurt me too. I wasn’t surprised Markov and Henryk died—honestly I was wondering how they hadn’t been discovered anyway; like when Ana asked them to stay behind to keep watch from inside the palace in the first book, I had some serious concerns. Turns out they were valid and completely warranted lol. I would’ve been shocked if Morganya hadn’t known they were loyal to Ana. It still made me sad, though, especially to know that Henryk suffered a really painful death. Oof. RIP Yuri and Seyin (although I hated him at times too lol. I want to know what he was going to say to Ana too before he died 😭 WHAT WAS IT AMÉLIE) and Narron (poor kid, he seemed like a cool guy. The best First Officer Ramson could’ve picked out. His death hurt.) and Markov and Henryk. And Luka and May from the first book. So many character deaths; what a brutal trilogy.
The message through the trilogy has been consistent and much needed in the times we’re living in right now. One of hope, of courage, of the desire to do the right thing and be the good in the world; of kindness and strength and generosity, warmth and understanding and peace. A world in which everyone, regardless of different cultures and backgrounds and nationalities, can work together to live peacefully and ensure equality and make things better. The ending of Crimson Reign was really heartwarming in that regard, full of that hope and light. Ramson’s awe at seeing Affinites and non-Affinites getting along and coexisting peacefully, seeing that Ana had achieved her vision for the future, summed it up best. (Also I love that we got to conclude this series on Ramson’s POV. Witnessing all of this change happening in Cyrilia, his love for Ana, and seeing how much Ramson has grown and changed into a better person, now embodying all the good Ana believed he could be, makes my heart very happy.)