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A review by fyreflifictionary
Namesake by Adrienne Young
3.0
Fable thought she had everything figured out until she was kidnapped by her father’s rivals. She quickly realizes that they have a scheme that requires her unique abilities. How will she escape and find her way back to her crew? Let’s find out!
Read if you like: YA fantasy, nautical settings, pirates, morally grey characters, straightforward plot, so many reveals, a plucky and unlucky FMC, and a swoony and dangerous MMC.
When Fable wakes up on an unfamiliar ship to the faces of the enemy and someone she thought was dead, she realizes that schemes and betrayal might be the least of her problems. Soon learns that the goal is an alliance with a powerful gem trader and it’s all somehow tied to her mother’s secret past. The talk on the docks say that West and the crew are risking everything to find her. So, she knows that it’s up to her to keep everyone safe. Can she make a deal to save them, or will she lose it all?
A sequel that’s full of secrets. Namesake is built on all the questions no one knew we were supposed to be asking. You get so invested in Saint and figuring out what’s going on between him and Fable that when Isolde’s mysterious past rocks up into the plot you’re left trying to find your sea legs. It is interesting. There’s action and angst and adventures. There’s also a lot of twists for the sake of twists. And there were several times I was asking myself how 7 people could be so dumb. Someone figure it out please! It’s the name of the book… and not a single person makes the connection. Help.
It kept my interest but it’s not going into the reread pile. I cared more about what would happen with all the characters’ relationships since the plot was just pulling us along for the sake of a caper. The big conclusion was more fun than I expected while still being totally cliché. Basically, most of the book didn’t need to happen if people read the maps more carefully. But ahhhh, pirate family drama.
This book is good for when you want the atmosphere but don’t have the energy for a complex read.
Read if you like: YA fantasy, nautical settings, pirates, morally grey characters, straightforward plot, so many reveals, a plucky and unlucky FMC, and a swoony and dangerous MMC.
When Fable wakes up on an unfamiliar ship to the faces of the enemy and someone she thought was dead, she realizes that schemes and betrayal might be the least of her problems. Soon learns that the goal is an alliance with a powerful gem trader and it’s all somehow tied to her mother’s secret past. The talk on the docks say that West and the crew are risking everything to find her. So, she knows that it’s up to her to keep everyone safe. Can she make a deal to save them, or will she lose it all?
A sequel that’s full of secrets. Namesake is built on all the questions no one knew we were supposed to be asking. You get so invested in Saint and figuring out what’s going on between him and Fable that when Isolde’s mysterious past rocks up into the plot you’re left trying to find your sea legs. It is interesting. There’s action and angst and adventures. There’s also a lot of twists for the sake of twists. And there were several times I was asking myself how 7 people could be so dumb. Someone figure it out please! It’s the name of the book… and not a single person makes the connection. Help.
It kept my interest but it’s not going into the reread pile. I cared more about what would happen with all the characters’ relationships since the plot was just pulling us along for the sake of a caper. The big conclusion was more fun than I expected while still being totally cliché. Basically, most of the book didn’t need to happen if people read the maps more carefully. But ahhhh, pirate family drama.
This book is good for when you want the atmosphere but don’t have the energy for a complex read.