A review by plumpaperbacks
Fire with Fire by Destiny Soria

adventurous emotional tense medium-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

While the concept of this book intrigued me, I have mixed feelings on the book itself. I liked the well-written cast of characters, complex sister dynamic, and the unique lore surrounding the dragons, slayers, and sorcerers. I especially liked the resident snarky dragon, Nox. He’s undeniably my favorite character.

What I wasn’t such a fan of, though, was the uneven pacing in the first half of the book vs the second, the rather rushed events in the last third of the story, and just how chaotic things ended up. In the last 100 pages, it felt like there was too much going on, like Soria wanted to fit too much into too few pages, and more than once I had to reread paragraphs to grasp what exactly was happening. I think the best solution here would’ve been to either add a few chapters to the book or split it into a duology. Either one would’ve allowed for a bit of breathing room between action sequences and room to further flesh out the story and characters.

ETA:
One thing that seemed unrealistic to me is that Eden was so familiar with her magic as soon as she got it. The girl was a sorcerer for less than half an hour before chasing Dani and managing all of these complex attack spells. Granted, I’m a human without magical experience, but uh… I don’t think it works that way??


The ending was satisfying, I’ll give it that, but as I write this review, my brain feels muddled. I’m not sure if that’s because of the time (it’s almost 4:30 a.m.) or the book or my alarmingly small number of brain cells or all three. Whatever the case may be, even if Fire with Fire didn’t end up being the spectacular urban fantasy I’d hoped it would be, I do recommend it. Soria has a lot of potential if she can figure out her pacing, and I look forward to giving more of her books a try in the future.

Representation
  • bisexual Mexican protagonist
  • Mexican protagonist with anxiety
  • side characters of color (includes Latine and Black rep)
  • sapphic side character

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