A review by cemeterygay
The Sunbearer Trials by Aiden Thomas

adventurous emotional funny fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes

5.0

This book really exceeded my expectations and the comp titles are a very good comparison. This book does read more Percy Jackson than Hunger Games in terms of tone. 

This book very much reads as Percy Jackson for older teens, mostly due to the more mature humor (still teen appropriate though) and heavier themes, think like early high school rather than later middle school. The humor could be a bit hit or miss, especially with the pop culture references, but the pace moves so quickly that I honestly didn't care. If I were to compare this book to anything else, the dynamics between Golds, Jades, and mortals gave me big My Hero Academia flashbacks in the best way.

I was initially concerned about the large cast and that characters would start to blend together but each semidios and Diose is so distinct that I had almost no problem with differentiating between the characters. I also was rooting for everyone to survive by the end of the book. This also goes into how much I love the worldbuilding and the attention put into setting. The world was given so much lovely description, I adored the lore especially the opening prologue, and the descriptions are just so vivid. This book also continues the trend of the food descriptions being so good that they actually make me hungry reading them.

The actual tournaments and main plot were so well-paced and plotted out. I loved the progression of reveals in this story leading to the climax. I think the emotional stakes were always very much there. I think the ending both resolved enough that I didn't feel too mad about where it ended while still very much setting up intrigue for the sequel.

Now onto Teo. Teo is my favorite protagonist written by this author to date. I love his strong convictions, the way he shows affection, and his more prankstery attitude. I just really bought into his beliefs and the emotional strength and conviction he had just really made me root for him. I also adored the build up for the romantic relationship in the series and the relationship between Teo and the main "antagonists" of the book.

I also absolutely adored the relationships between the Dioses and their kids and it provided so much intense emotion in this book

Ultimately, the book was surprisingly fun for a book about a death tournament while still having a deeply emotional center. I could not recommend this book enough.

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