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Furyborn by Claire Legrand
3.0

“People like us don’t fight for our own hope,” he said quietly. “We fight for everyone else’s.”


From other reviews, Furyborn seems to be a "love-it-or-hate-it" type of book.To me, it wasn't great, and it wasn't terrible. Furyborn had a lot of creative worldbuilding that I haven't seen in fantasy often, and a few interesting characters. Really, I just feel somewhat ambivalent about this book--there were a lot of things I liked, yes, and there were a lot of things I found boring or slow.

Between Rielle and Eliana, I liked both of them about the same. Neither of them were my favourite characters, but I didn't find myself particularly annoyed with them. I felt like both Rielle and Eliana were very archetypal, somewhat generic fantasy characters. The side characters, however, I found interesting. I liked Ludivine a lot; she was just so incredibly sweet and angelic, so even though Rielle and Audric didn't hold my interest, I liked being in Rielle's POV because of Ludivine. On Eliana's side, I liked Remy, Navi, and Simon the most. Remy and Navi were just so nice and positive compared to Eliana's pessimism, and Simon was intriguing, even if he was kind of an ass.

Plot-wise, I found the whole book somewhat slow and repetitive, which really made me struggle in some areas. I really felt it with Rielle and the seven trials: each of them were so similar to the other ones. Rielle would describe her costume, the crowd cheering, almost die, and Corien would speak to her and she would miraculously make it out alive. I liked seeing Rielle outside of the trials and especially with Ludivine and Audric, and witnessing her trying to navigate complicated court politics. Eliana's side of the plot was slightly faster and more interesting, but I still struggled in parts.

One aspect of the worldbuilding I liked is the creativity of the lore. Angels don't show up in otherworld fantasy often, so that part of the worldbuilding had me hooked. It's a fairly unique concept. I do wish some of it had been expanded on--I would like to know more about the empire and the angels--but I expect that will come in the next book. There was a lot in this book that I was expecting to happen but looks as if it will be saved for a sequel, which personally left me feeling kind of betrayed. The book opens with Rielle as an anti-heroine and a crisis, but after that all the action died down, and so did the continued establishment of the world that makes it feel real.

This is especially obvious in the 1,000 year timeskip from Rielle and Eliana. Except for a few mild things, such as guns and gas lamps, the world feels the same. I would say, in our historical terms, Rielle's era reads like high medieval era, while Eliana's is Regency-era at the latest--that's a difference of 400-500 years at most, and I definitely felt the lack of change while reading it. Why do people still fight with swords, especially when there are guns? Why are the same countries all still around with the same borders after 1000 years, even accounting for the existence of the Undying Empire? Having the feeling of time lapsed would have been really nice to see and given the book a lot more atmosphere than it has right now.

I did mostly enjoy reading Furyborn, though. Yes, the plot was a bit slow at times, but in the end I liked the characters and the worldbuilding enough, even if nothing was an absolute standout to me. Throne of Glass fans might like this, but if you don't like slow fantasies, then this book is probably not for you. I will definitely be picking up Kingsbane after it comes out.

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