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3.5 AVERAGE

anoooukje's review

4.0
adventurous challenging dark emotional funny sad tense fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

3.75 stars

I'm not sure how I feel about this one.  Some things I really liked, but the story just felt like it needed to be polished just a little.
yueting's profile picture

yueting's review

3.0

three stars

i stand by what i said in one of my updates: The Savage and The Swan is both perplexing and intriguing and i’m not quite sure how to reconcile the two. if going based off the writing alone, this book would be much higher than three stars. Fields knows how to write with a capital w; i found myself highlighting and saving so many passages, which i don’t normally do (such as, as soft as rose petals warmed by the sun or dragging day into deep pinks and oranges to gift to the growing night). however, there’s also the rest of the book to contend with.

Opal was so terribly passive — through all of it. i think it’s in part due to poor characterization, but mostly due to loose, if barely tangible, character motivations. her actions and thoughts were confusing at best and useless at worst. she alludes to having some sort of plan, but never actively does anything to execute it. she makes decisions that seem illogical and her thoughts and opinions seem to change at the drop of a hat. she was an incredibly difficult character to pin down and that really detracted my enjoyment of the book because she is our main narrator. thankfully, Dade does not suffer from the same vague and convoluted characterization. he’s brilliantly crafted and so torturously lovable, and i just wish Opal could have received an ounce of the clarity and attention from Fields that he did.

i do also think part of my confusion with Opal’s actions (and inaction) is due to very ambiguous world building. though we are told about the history of the war and the prophecies that started it, it’s not nearly enough to justify it being the central conflict in the book and the source of so many characters backstories and motivations. so much of the story revolves around this war and how it is tearing Opal and Dade apart as well as their country for it to be covered up and glossed over with dubious, while brilliant, descriptions. i’m fine if Fields wants to keep secrets and build suspense, but it wasn’t done right — when we get to any sort of reveal my relief that i’m finally getting answers (and only somewhat) is greater than any genuine emotion it was supposed to get out of me.

as someone who expects vibrant world building and consequential side characters in a fantasy romance, both of these were disappointing for me. but though it lacks in the fantasy department, Opal and Dade’s romance is lovely. i’m especially charmed by Dade’s self-sacrifice — in so many ways — for Opal’s happiness. though the enemies to lovers development is hampered by the confusion clouding Opal’s pov and thoughts, it is ultimately satisfying, and the highlight of The Savage and The Swan was the banter and teasing that occasionally unfolds between them. i teeter between disappointment and hopefulness with this book, even after finishing it, because Fields writing really was spectacular — and perhaps another of her books will sit better with me.

courtgs's review against another edition

DID NOT FINISH: 49%

Terrible

paleudult's review

4.5
adventurous emotional tense medium-paced

courteneynoonan's review

3.5
dark emotional funny hopeful mysterious reflective sad medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: N/A
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes
bethelreads12's profile picture

bethelreads12's review

3.25
adventurous fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: Complicated
Flaws of characters a main focus: No

 3 stars – Feather meets fire, but where’s the heat? 
This book left me wanting more. Every chapter felt a little rushed, like it could’ve used another hundred pages to breathe. Honestly, this should’ve been a duet—there was so much potential here. A savage beast and a swan? LOL. An odd pair, destined to fail... yet written in the stars. 
Dade, the Wolf King, is hellbent on revenge after Opal’s grandfather launched a fear-driven war that killed his parents. In return, Dade wages one of his own—no mercy, no questions asked. Opal, caught in the crossfire, is bound by a prophecy: 
"When feather meets fire, vengeance will expire."

Through betrayal, heartbreak, and pain, she stops a useless war and melts the frozen heart of a brutal king. They were fated mates, written in the stars to right their families’ ancient wrongs.
 
“I want to poison you, the way you’ve done to me,” she said.
 “Poison me, sunshine, and don’t you dare think twice.”

Swoony quotes? Yes. Depth and pacing? Kinda lacking. Still a fun read, but I needed more from it.
 

justclayreads's review


Astounding. Seriously! I will read anything she writes because everything she writes is masterful. I do love her fantasy books, but I find myself craving her new adult books more. Nonetheless, definitely read this one is beautiful.
fallenreader's profile picture

fallenreader's review

3.0

tropes: romantic fantasy, hot chemistry, possessive hero, enemies to lovers

ashdog's review

3.0
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes