I'm on the precipice of a slump and unfortunately not sold on this. I cannot bring myself to pick it back up at the moment. There are a lot of things that are just feeling really disjointed to me.
I am not buying the 1920s Harlem setting (and that was a HUGE selling point for me). Something feels off about the way the time period is being used. It's so surface level? Like this book could have been set in any decade with some minor wording adjustments.
The characters are not really grabbing me either. And usually I can forgive some wonky world-building if the characters are engaging but neither are doing it for me.
And it might be knit-picky but I was reading via audio and with this being dual POV, they should have had two narrators because right now the single narrator is doing NOTHING to differentiate between the two FMCs. And with the POV switches mid-chapter, I cannot follow along very easily.
IDK. I may come back to this at a later time. But consider this a soft DNF for now.
THIS is what I want when I'm looking for enemies to lovers in fantasy. Wow, wow, wow. The anger and hatred and tension between these two was INSANE and the slow burn is perfectly paced. I'm also a big fan of the "I don't want to save you from your darkness, I want to make you worse," energy that Kidan/Susenyos had.
This is a dark and twisty story with an entire cast of morally gray characters. And while I may not have always followed the worldbuilding, I was able to look past that because the characters were SO compelling (and a little depraved) that I just needed to know what they were going to do next.
I really enjoyed the audiobook but I wish I had the e-book/physical for annotating purposes because there were SO many quotable moments between Kidan and Susenyos.
"To hear of people who can speak and love and reason and to still think that they are beasts, why, only a man could do that." "Forgive me." "Of course I will forgive you. Only a beast cannot forgive."
Just lovely.
This was a beautiful story about the importance of memory, grief, and forgiveness. I continue to be in awe of Nghi Vo's ability to pack such a punch in so few words.
I didn't dislike this one but it is my least favorite out of the series so far. As this series has progressed, I've preferred the moments that we spend within the secondary stories more so than the main plot that follows Chih and Into the Riverlands felt like it was mainly grounded in Chih's story.
"Well, there you are, Rabbit." 🥲 I wasn't ready for that.
This was such a lush little delight.
I definitely think having the ebook on hand while I was listening to the audio helped. There are a lot of tense changes throughout the chapters and that was hard to grasp solely with the audio.