3.52 AVERAGE


I cried several times and I am absolutely not embarrassed to admit it

Anyway, on a more serious note, I think this duology being promoted as YA kind of harmed it in the long run? It's excellent, but I feel like the reading level is a lot closer to The Night Circus than, say, These Violent Delights. Or maybe that says something about the current state of YA, I don't know.

I’m surprised that I actually enjoyed it! The relationship between everyone, their friendships and thank God for once somewhere (surprisingly in a famous love story) friendship is as valuable as love, NOW THIS! IS WHAT I CALL PROGRESS!✊🏼

P.s: it’s more than three.

A quote by C.S. Lewis I just read reminds me of this book:
What sort of a lover am I to think so much about my affliction and so much less about hers? Even the insane call, 'Come back,' is all for my own sake. I never even raised the question whether such a return, if it were possible, would be good for her. I want her back as an ingredient in the restoration of my past. Could I have wished her anything worse? Having got once through death, to come back and then, at some later date, have all her dying to do over again? They call Stephen the first martyr. Hadn't Lazarus the rawer deal?
(From A Grief Observed)

A fast-paced but ultimately disappointing sequel. When I read Bright Smoke, Cold Fire, I was instantly enchanted. It had a brilliantly original premise - Romeo and Juliet set in a Sabriel-esque high fantasy world of magic, necromancy and political intrigue. I also loved Hodge’s protagonists, Paris and Runajo, and the slow-burning development of their friendships with Romeo and Juliet. Endless Water, Starless Sky is a let-down on both these fronts - the plot seemed clumsily strung together and the bulk of the novel was told from Romeo and Juliet’s perspectives - two characters who were much more likeable when they were side characters to Paris and Runajo. When the Romeo and Juliet characters of your Romeo and Juliet retelling aren’t compelling enough to hold the reader’s interest, you know something’s wrong. Honestly, if Endless Water, Starless Sky had been told through Paris and Runajo’s perspectives I’m sure I would have enjoyed it much more.

There are some high points - Hodge’s writing is, as always, lyrical and beautiful, and the final scenes of the novel, which take place in the land of the dead, are fantastically weird. Hodge’s descriptions of the lush, wild underworld make trudging through the rest of the book worthwhile, although we’re not in the underword long before the central conflict of the duology is disappointingly resolved with a deus ex machina ending.

As a fan of Bright Smoke, Cold Fire, I expected to love this one. But it was a struggle to read, and at around the halfway mark I realised I was only carrying on to find out how it ended - not because I was invested in the characters or the plot.

Many thanks to Balzer + Bray for providing a copy of Endless Water, Starless Sky. The opinions expressed in this review are my own. Endless Water, Starless Sky will be released on July 24th.

Publisher: Balzer + Bray
Rating: 2 stars | ★★✰✰✰
Review cross-posted to Paperback'd Reviews

This book finishes the latest duology by author Rosamund Hodge. On the surface, this duology could be described in the briefest sense as "Romeo and Juliet with zombies in a fantasy universe", but that description does no justice to the complex and interesting world of the novels. It would tempt comparisons with such recent works as "Pride and Prejudice and Zombies" which was a funny mashup of a classic with the recent zombie fad. Hodge's book is nothing of the sort. It isn't funny, and unlike P&P&Z, her book is entirely original. The characters and parts of the plot from Shakespeare are certainly referenced, but what she has done with them stands on its own.

As the city of Viyara struggles to keep a remnant of humanity alive in the face of a terrible curse, the main characters' struggle to save the city leads them to ask hard questions about the course of their lives, their identities, and that ultimate question, meaning.
Endless Water, Starless Sky pursues these questions relentlessly, not shirking, even when they lead the characters to face danger and death. This book remains true to the dark fairytale style that Hodge has become known for, and the cleverness of her narrative. EWSS surprised me throughout, with unexpected plot turns and an ending I didn't expect.

I need to read this again! Highly recommend.

A pretty good conclusion to this series. Rosamund Hodge is creative and this story shows her ability to take a known story (Romeo and Juliet) and turn it completely on its head with a fantastical storyline that really draws you in. I wish I had actually read the book instead of listened to it. I think I may have missed some things, but therein lies the problem. There were too many parts that could have been skipped over and the story would have been just fine. The characters were engaging and the story was good. There were just some parts that seemed unnecessary, confusing or a little redundant. Overall though, I enjoyed the books and look forward to more by this author.

Thank you, Balzer + Bray, for the ARC!

This was a mixed bag for me.

I've been a fan of Rosamund Hodge since she wrote Cruel Beauty. The element which draws me back to Hodge time and again-- her ability to recreate the atmosphere of myth and folklore, combined with her lyrical prose-- is still present here.

It's hidden, however, by the heavy-handedness of the Romeo and Juliet retelling. I don't understand why she chose to emphasize this so heavily. Had she chosen to use it as a framework for her original narrative, it would have been fine, but I felt like the characters just shared names with Shakespeare's characters and nothing else.

Last, and most importantly, I think it's important to mention that the Bright Smoke, Cold Fire duology is transphobic. As a fellow Catholic, I am aware that my church promotes transphobia, however much I love it. I would have loved to see work by a Catholic author sensitively validate trans identity, but it is not this book. As a cis person, I cannot meaningfully deconstruct why this representation is problematic, but Hodge definitely fails to validate trans identity and actively undermines it. If you're interested in some #ownvoices novels by authors who identify as trans, please check out this Guardian list of children's books with trans characters.

I know this series isn't incredibly popular, but I'll admit it: I can't tell why. By no means is it perfect, but there's enough to love about it. Strong characters—including, by the way, Runajo, love of my life—a great found family, and a romance that isn't the greatest but was compelling enough for me to love. The setting is incredible, the plot twisted but not incoherent... Yeah, this is probably one of my favorite fantasy series of all time.

darkmina's review

4.0
adventurous dark emotional mysterious medium-paced

A good ending. Better than the first book, I really liked how the afterlife was decribed