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mxkanteven's review against another edition
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? No
5.0
That’s the best word to describe it. Deborah Falaye did a phenomenal job creating the world of Nagea, taking inspiration from Yoruba lore and real world colonial histories to weave together a challenging yet gratifying read.
The book doesn’t shy away from the atrocities of war, colonialism and subjugation. Nor does it sweep rage and anger under the rug in favour of a love & light message. It paints a vivid picture of the realities of being a child living and fighting in a world of systemic inequities and oppressions.
Graphic: Genocide, Rape, Sexual assault, Sexual violence, Torture, Fire/Fire injury, Grief, Physical abuse, Self harm, and War
Moderate: Physical abuse, Gun violence, Confinement, Outing, Injury/Injury detail, and Genocide
amivireads's review against another edition
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
5.0
Blood Scion has become my new favorite fantasy book! The characters are complex, and even when I didn't agree with their decisions, I understood why they made them.
Slone is a great main character that is put through a lot but still holds onto her humanity as she is put through horrifying things.
There's a lot of twists with this story that I didn't see coming, and the ending left us off on a cliffhanger. Usually I can guess what's going to happen next, but I really have no idea where the story goes from here. This truly shows me how great of a writer Deborah Falaye is. I need book 2 now!
Graphic: War, Colonisation, Blood, Child abuse, Child death, Fire/Fire injury, Genocide, Physical abuse, Slavery, and Violence
Moderate: Colonisation, Cultural appropriation, Rape, Sexual harassment, Self harm, Sexual assault, and Torture
Minor: Death of parent
utopiastateofmind's review against another edition
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
5.0
TW/CW: children soldiers
Blood Scion is about children being forced to be soldiers, burning from within, and powers we must conceal. In a culture and society ruled by fear of persecution, Sloane grows up having to hide who she is and her powers. However it becomes harder, and more painful, to hide her abilities when she is drafted into the army. There she decides that she can use that opportunity to find out what happened to her mother. But there she will have to make harder choices than ever before for survival.
Sloane has to constantly weigh the costs of freedom for herself versus her family and community. To find out what she will have to lose in order to keep her life. Forced to make impossible decisions, Sloane's training shows her more than she ever thought. There it becomes clear the extent of the conquest, the history and culture that is lost, and the misinformation. Throughout Blood Scion, Sloane and a variety of other characters are forced to figure out if sacrifice in the short term is worth the benefits in the long term. They must also figure out how to deal with their guilt.
Graphic: Torture
Moderate: Sexual assault
bookstarbri's review against another edition
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
4.5
However, if you are able to get past all of those, this book is WORTH IT. I have never read anything like it my life. It is a stunning YA military, fantasy novel. Its main character, Sloan, is what's called a Scion, which is basically a being descended from gods who harbors magic. The people in charge, however, despise Scions and hunt them down. So when Sloan lands in the heart of the very people who want to kill her, she has figure out how to survive in such a perilous world, away from her friends and family.
Sloan is a wonderful character. Watching her do everything she has to do to survive was horrific and terrible and such a fascinating character arc. She loses a lot of herself in this book. She does a lot of horrible things. She makes a lot of bad decisions and, worse, she loses a lot of her humanity because of this terrible world. We do a lot of moving in this book and the person she was at the start of its 430ish pages is not at all who she is at the end, yet the core of her remains very much the same. The side characters were good too. I think I wish we could've gotten more from them. There was a lot of Sloan's inner monologue that I wish could've been condensed so we could have her interact more with the other characters. Because of the nature of the book, I pretty much consider all of the characters besides Sloan side characters, since none of them really stood out enough to be a main character along with Sloan.
The plot of this book is amazing. It did get a bit slow in the middle and, again, the inner monologues got to be a bit much and repetitive at times. However, there are a lot of twists and turns and BIG surprises. I guessed the big one at the end a few chapters earlier, but I hadn't guessed many of the other ones throughout. This is one of the darkest YA books I've ever read. But everything that happens happens for a reason and isn't simply to frivolously put the MC through hell. This book is amazing. It is brilliant. The writing is fantastic. I don't know where the sequel will go, but I am both terrified and ecstatic to read it.
Thank you to the author, HarperCollins, and NetGalley for providing an ARC of this book in exchange for an honest review!
Graphic: Gun violence, Injury/Injury detail, Murder, Physical abuse, Violence, Death, Fire/Fire injury, Genocide, Blood, Child abuse, Colonisation, Grief, Sexual assault, and War
Moderate: Child death, Death of parent, Rape, Self harm, and Torture
Minor: Trafficking