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Reviews tagging 'Blood'

Silver Elite by Dani Francis

38 reviews

fast-paced

Thank you Dani Francis, Del Rey, and NetGalley for the free gift!! 

From the very first page, Silver Elite had me absolutely hooked. This is dystopian romantasy at its finest—intense, addictive, and brimming with high stakes, sizzling chemistry, and heart-wrenching choices. 

Wren is a force: fierce, vulnerable, and endlessly compelling. Her psychic abilities and secret alliances make every moment feel like a knife’s edge, and the worldbuilding—dark, dangerous, and vividly imagined—pulled me in completely. Cross Redden (the commanding officer/love interest) was perfection: the perfect blend of ruthless and vulnerable, making the enemies-to-lovers arc perfection. The pacing of their relationship was spot-on, with just the right amount of tension, longing, and emotional unraveling. 

This felt like Divergent for adults, but with even sharper emotional depth and richer romantic tension. The action scenes were pulse-pounding, the emotional moments gut-wrenching, and the steamy scenes were so well done without ever feeling rushed or gratuitous. 

I am completely, totally obsessed and already desperate for the next book. If you love dystopian settings, forbidden romance, elite training academies, psychic powers, and stories that will leave you screaming for more—Silver Elite needs to be on your radar. 

An easy 5 stars.

Expand filter menu Content Warnings
adventurous tense fast-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

This is me telling everyone to READ THIS BOOK!

I was fortunate to get an ARC of this book through NetGalley… and oh my god.

This book was MADE for the kids who have been trying to fill a hole in their life since they read Divergent and The Hunger Games in middle/high school. I was hooked from the very start. It truly gave me everything I didn’t know I needed. 

The plot and writing was so good. I was on the edge of my seat for nearly the entire book. The characters were lovable yet flawed. The tension was *perfect* and I was internally screaming constantly. 

I really appreciate that this book gave me everything I wanted from a dystopian novel, without feeling like it was coping other series that I’ve read. I felt like the plot twists and overall conflict was unique. Imagine your favorite dystopian novel from childhood, but turned on its head, and with spice!!! 

I can’t say it enough how much I enjoyed this book and cannot WAIT for the next one. 5 stars. Read it ASAP!!

Expand filter menu Content Warnings
adventurous emotional mysterious sad tense fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated

“Our gifts aren’t always a gift, little bird. Sometimes, they’re a curse.”

Wow, you will think you understand the meaning behind this quote at the beginning of the book. But, you have no idea how much more meaning it will carry once you finish. I was at 50% of the book and then had to sit for the next 3.5 hours to finish it because I could not put it down. 

This dystopian novel brings the same feeling you experienced after finishing the following series:
The Hunger Games
Divergent 
Red Queen 
Fourth Wing
X-Men

The world-building in this book is solid. I was able to follow along easily and didn’t feel the need to flip back to determine where the characters were or what was happening. Something I would love to see (and this is likely to appear in a future book, as there’s no way another book is not coming) is a more in-depth explanation of how Mods came to be (think The Maze Runner prequel). 

This book had a mix of predictable, satisfying, and shocking plot twists. I definitely was entertained as each puzzle piece moved into place. Francis ultimately created a great depiction of a morally grey society. By the end of the book, I knew that there were more complexities behind each side (e.g., Mods, Primes, Abberants, etc.). Francis’ story allows her readers to begin making inferences about who really is good vs. who is bad. I have a feeling this will fluctuate a lot in future books. 

Now, for my slow-burn, enemies-to-lovers enthusiasts, look no further because this is an excellent book for that. The tension that develops between the FMC and MMC is evident from the start, and it was enjoyable for me to provide commentary while reading and trying to guess when they would finally admit to having feelings for each other. However, my one qualm with the romance was that it felt a little unbalanced. It seemed to go from slow-burn tension, to the “F” it moment (which I always enjoy), to (in my opinion) unnecessary hookup moments, to a quick “I love you”. I think it would be very significant to create a better mix for the romance to truly capture the characters’ genuine feelings for each other. 

Overall, this was a fun, entertaining, heart-pounding, out-loud gasping read that most dystopian readers will find themselves drawn to. I know that I can not wait to see what happens in the next installment.

Expand filter menu Content Warnings
adventurous challenging dark emotional hopeful mysterious tense medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated


Silver Elite is what happens when Divergent, The Hunger Games, X-Men, and Minority Report get into an anonymous telepathic group chat moderated by Meg Ryan and Tom Hanks from You’ve Got Mail, except with the spice levels turnt, and it's probably going to be one of the biggest books of the year. Hello debut author Dani Francis where have you been all our lives.

To set the scene, I had just finished Sunrise on the Reaping and was deep in that post-book mourning period, where I expected to DNF five books and fall into a spiral and had accepted that my next read would be The Great Disappointment.

Instead, Silver Elite said, “Get up, loser, we’re going reading.” And I did.
By 15%, I’d already been emotionally compromised, handed an entire sociopolitical structure, and exposed to themes of surveillance, systemic discrimination, a bit of genocide and the ethics of psychic powers.

That brings me to Wren, our FMC. Wren has got a gun 🎵, (sing it to the tune of Janie’s got a gun), a conscience, and one of the most entertaining internal monologues I’ve read in a while.
She’s a witty, sniper-trained telepath who has Professor X meets Katniss energy. Wren would for sure shoot an apple out of a pig’s mouth just to prove a point. She grapples with power, surveillance, and consent in ways that add depth beneath all the action and romantic slow-burn tension. She’s overpowered but she knows it. And she’s wrestling with what that means.

And then there’s Cross. He’s definitely going to take over BookTok by force. Tall, dark, hot and haunted. He was probably mixed in a lab where they blended Four, Xaden, and Rhysand.
Not gonna lie. Silver Elite does have some of your favourite well-used romantasy tropes. But they don’t feel tired. They feel reinvigorated and handled with narrative purpose. There is a whisper of a love triangle, but don’t worry, everything gets resolved fairly cleanly, handled like an adult (thank you) and I actually kinda liked it?

There's also an Orwellian undercurrent, but it never feels derivative.

In the spirit of full transparency, I saw the Big Reveal coming from very early on. In fact, I had it circled in red with arrows. But sometimes, seeing it coming doesn’t dull the impact. Sometimes it makes it better, because the anticipation is half the fun. And in this case, it hit exactly the way it needed to.

Nevertheless, I won’t pretend this book is flawless. It leans hard into its romantasy flair, so if you're after layered dystopian commentary or intricate worldbuilding, this probably won't scratch that itch. The dystopian elements stay pretty surface-level. So if you approach this more as romantasy with dystopian seasoning, rather than a deep dive into systemic collapse and profound dystopian themes, you might just fall for it too. For me, the romantasy lover in me was too busy blushing and kicking my feet like I was reading ACOMAF for the first time to care, hence my rating is definitely a vibes rating, rather than a critical one.

It's chaotic. It’s spicy. It’s emotionally intelligent and self-aware. There’s a quiet subtlety in the way it exposes the cracks in our world through the lens of another. This book gave me the same high I got from reading the romamtasy greats, while still feeling like something new. I devoured this as fast as I could whilst life and adulting got in the way. I will be camping outside Dani Francis's inbox until book two drops.

Thank you so much to Random House Worlds | Del Rey for the opportunity to read this arc in exchange for an honest review.



Expand filter menu Content Warnings
adventurous challenging dark mysterious tense fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

If you enjoyed the post apocalyptic Divergent but wanted more spice then this book is for you. Wren (Tris) is one of the Modified and her power is telepathy. She's also been trained in combat and has much better than average shooting skills. She has been hiding her power on her ranch with her Uncle for over 20 years until one day her skills bring the unwanted attention of Command, the ruling class of "Primes" or unmodified people. I can't expand on more of the plot without giving away too much.

Dani Francis holds no punches and presents the FMC's flaws and vices out the gate. Wren's impulsive and wreckless nature drives the plot at the beginning but she keeps getting herself into trouble throughout, which was good writing on Francis' part because I was losing interest at Wren's inability to realize she is responsible for the results of her actions. There are plenty of plot twists to keep the reader interested and distracted from the FMC's immaturity, especially when Wren meets her Wolf (Four).

This is definitely the start of a series and the book ends with a HFN. Find the trigger and content warnings as many hard topics and scenarios are presented in the story, like death of a parent figure and mental illness. 

Expand filter menu Content Warnings
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

Expand filter menu Content Warnings
adventurous challenging dark mysterious tense medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: Complicated
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated

Thanks to Netgalley and Random House UK for this eARC.

I’m still wondering how I feel about this book. On the one hand I’m desperate to read a sequel, having loved the last 60% of it, on the other, the first 40% was pretty slow going with lots of plodding info dumps I could have done without. Wren at first was also a tough character to like, making some poor decisions but I was ultimately won over by her later development. I’d recommend this to fans of “Powerless” and anyone who likes a strong female lead, the action is well written and the romance spicy. I decided to give it a 4⭐️, because despite its flaws, it still enjoyed my time reading.

Expand filter menu Content Warnings
adventurous mysterious tense medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: Complicated

Expand filter menu Content Warnings