A review by kitvaria_sarene
The Dark Feather by Anna Stephens

adventurous challenging dark emotional hopeful reflective sad tense

5.0

The Dark Feather by Anna Stephens delivers an epic conclusion to one of the best dark fantasy series I've read.

This book has ripped out my heart and stomped on it a couple of times, but it also made me feel hope. There is a perfectly struck balance between the horrendous events and those (big and small) moments of gratification and joy.

The characters are absolutely one of the main strengths of this series. They are all incredibly well written, and feel totally real. All the characters have depths of motivation and mindset that make their actions not just understandable but entirely reasonable, so that you even empathise or sympathise with the villains. At other times you can feel hate towards the supposed heroes. There are no stereotypes, instead all the characters have a whole range of facets, which meant I ended up rooting for almost all of them at different points in the story. When you find yourself feeling for the obviously wrong people, then you know a writer knows their craft to the bones.

For example, if you follow my reviews, you know how much I usually detest romance. Here, some of the romantic relationships are so integral to the characters that I was totally hooked and fully invested in how things turned out. None of it felt like the artificial drama - the utterly avoidable manufactured conflict - that you so often see. Instead it was just human all the way through. People being believable and credible, doing the best they could in the circumstances. If delivering that kind of authenticity is not a mark of the highest craft, I don't know what is!

The world building is superb, and the politics get ever more entangled. The way the cultures, religions and societies are entwined again illustrated exceptional levels of the writer’s craft. With a lot of books it feels like there's a nice two dimensional background, like the backdrop on a theatre stage. Here it feels utterly three dimensional, as though I just walked right into this world, and could have lifted any stone, or walked around any corner and the world would still have been fully fleshed out in depth and detail.

All in all this one emotional rollercoaster of a story, which managed to leave me both hollowed out, and yet somehow also full of hope. How that works? Some kind of magic…

I was utterly satisfied, even though I felt like yelling at the author quite a few times along the way. Some of these decisions really hurt, but they also all feel very organic, and just needed to happen.

It'll take me a while to fully digest this, as the best stories do!