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addisonrutherford09's review
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? No
4.0
Overall, I enjoyed this book amd would recommend it to anyone who likes a good romantacy!
Graphic: Violence
Moderate: Child death, Confinement, Cursing, Death, Torture, Violence, and Death of parent
Minor: Rape, Sexual assault, Alcohol, and Sexual harassment
In this book, there is a fair amount of violence with moderate discription of blood, dead bodies and death. The swearing is kept to a minimum and I remember there possibly being a few uses of damn, hell, shut, or ass. Characters drink alcohol. The romance does not go beyond kissing, but one kissing scene got a might bit "steamy". A female character stares at a male character when he removes his shirt. Sexual violence is discussed, but in no great detail.ernea_navish's review against another edition
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
3.5
The romance story-line of the book was perfectly written. Considering all the circumstances Tessa had to face, nothing about the romance felt forced, it just felt natural.
The story had a good balance of romance and politics. It wasn't heavily focused on just one thing, and it never interrupted a flow of one or another.
Graphic: Violence, Injury/Injury detail, and Pandemic/Epidemic
Moderate: Death and Murder
Minor: Rape
mzmegara's review against another edition
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
4.25
Moderate: Torture and Violence
Minor: Rape
takarakei's review against another edition
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
5.0
- Robin Hood inspired
- court politics
- herbal medicine
- angsty romance
- revolution rumblings
- brotherhood
Protect my poor baby Corrick! I love him so much. I was just getting back into my YA Fantasy era when I first read this a year ago, and coming back to it made me love it even more!
1/5 đ¶ïž
Graphic: Death, Violence, Death of parent, and Pandemic/Epidemic
Moderate: Child death, Torture, Blood, Alcohol, Injury/Injury detail, and Classism
Minor: Rape
Very brief mention of rape (off page no details)pauline_ljm_iii's review
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
5.0
My favourite part about this was the emotions, and how believably they are written. Tessa, the fmc, is an emotional person, and I usually struggle to connect with these character types because they can easily turn melodramatic, but I think Tessaâs were done brilliantly. Worth studying to learn how to do.
The romance was very well-done. Tessa starts off as almost an item with her crush, which prevents instalove quite effectively, and their relational dynamic encounters some interesting obstacles and develops through that conflict in a fascinating way. The end result is very believable. It also wasnât a super physical/pda/touchy-touchy relationship, which I appreciate. (See the content list at the end of the review for more details.)
The politics and twists were also done super well (I called part of the main one, muahaha). It takes a bit of effort at the beginning to get everyone straight, though, and I found the charts at the beginning helpful. I usually donât like when I have to supplement my reading so to speak, but with DtN I was already hooked and more than willing to put the time in.
On that note â the narrative voice of the writing talks slower than Iâm used to reading. I found I had to slow down my own reading by a little to catch the feel and flow of everything, but again I didnât mind this because I felt it was intentional and added to the story.
The pacing was brilliant. Threads opened and closed seamlessly, and I wouldnât say itâs breakneck pacing necessarily, but there was always something compelling me not to put it down. Teach meeeee
As for negatives, I have some nitpicks about prose, and I was a little uncomfortable during a to-be-mentioned âdetailed embrace,â but other than that no complaints are coming to mind. I fell hard and fast in love with this book. I would like to see more of Tessa growing as a character in the sequel.
It was immediately and extremely similar to the basic premise and character roles in Midnight Thief by Livia Blackburne, and remained so for a good hundred pages. Some might be put off by this, but I loved Midnight Thief and was fully on board. It developed into its own thing soon enough, though, and (shh donât tell) I may have even liked it better than MT.
Moderate: Death and Death of parent
Minor: Cursing, Rape, Sexual content, and Vomit
Minimalish content (certainly not as far as Brigid could have gone, which I appreciate): -> 1 each of a-, d-, and b-word. A couple h-s maybe but theyâre not coming to mind. -> A few kisses. There is one very *detailed* embrace, but it doesnât progress. The love interest goes shirtless a couple times (for wound treatment reasons, which at least thereâs a reason), and Tessa finds it hard not to ogle. -> Tessa at one point leads her coworker and her employer to believe sheâs pregnant, but itâs brief and false and is not a plot point by any means. -> In a scuffle, Tessaâs dress is torn to expose some of her front. Her opposer sits on top of her while this happens. Witnesses spin a scandal, but itâs also brief and false. Plenty of bloody fighting, and moderately-graphic descriptions of death. Iâm not one to be too affected by this, but itâs worth mentioning.nononononononono's review against another edition
- Plot- or character-driven? Plot
- Strong character development? Yes
4.0
Moderate: Death, Gore, Torture, Blood, Grief, Death of parent, Murder, and Alcohol
Minor: Rape
bhavya_is_reading's review
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? It's complicated
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
3.5
âI think that very few people truly deserve what they get, Tessa.â He pauses, and for the briefest moment, sadness flickers through his eyes. âFor good or for bad.â
~ Rating- 3.5 stars ~
Note- 22/9/21- After some thinking I am lowering my rating from 5 stars to 3.5 stars. I still really enjoyed the book but I didn't completely consider its flaws, which is why I am lowering it. I think I was a bit too biased while rating it the first time. Sorry.
This review is very long and it is spoiler free.
Content/ Trigger Warnings- Alcohol, Betrayal, Blood, Being chained, Biting lip and drawing blood, Crying, Dying, Death of a mother, Death of a father, Death of parents (recounted), Dead bodies, Death of a friend, Death of children & Murder of children, Possible Depression, Execution, Eyeball trauma, Epidemic, Faking a pregnancy, Fire, Grief, Guilt, Guilt over death of a friend, Locking yourself in a Cupboard, Murder, Nightmares, PTSD, Panic-attacks, Prison, Rebellion, Sickness & Illness, Self-harm (digging fingers into palms), Suicidal Ideation (mild), Suffocation, Several Mental Breakdown Scenes, Threat of Rape & Sexual Assault, Mention of Sexual assault occurring, Torture, Urine, Vomiting, Violence
Note- I have tried to include all the content warnings that I noticed, but there is no guarantee that I havenât missed something.
-Mention of some of these in the review-
Defy the Night, by Brigid Kemmerer is a dark, atmospheric YA fantasy with morally grey characters. I was hoping this would be a 5 star read, and was very happy that my prediction came true and was happy with the book (even though I lowered my rating), though I am a little bit biased considering Brigid Kemmerer is one of my favourite authors.
âItâs easy to love your king when everyone is well fed and healthy. A bit harder when everyone is not.â
In the kingdom of Kandala, sickness stalks the streets. The cure is Moonflower, a rare and expensive flower only the richest can afford. King Harristan and his brother Prince Corrick are forced to rule with an iron fist, show no mercy and rule with cruelty.
âWhen there are calls for revolution,â I say to him, âwe should be riding at the front, not hiding in the shadows.â
Tessa Cade is a masked outlaw, who robs from the rich to help the poor by distributing food and medicine to those who need it most, along with her friend Weston. When it becomes clear that the only way to save her people is to assassinate the King, Tessa must face a deadly mission that will take her to the dark heart of the kingdom to work with the very people she intended to destroy.
âI hate the king,â I whisper. âI hate the prince. I hate what theyâve done. I hate what Kandala has become.â
The plot of the book was entertaining. It is fast-paced, despite being so long. There isnât a dull moment, it hooks you from the start. It does take some time for some important things to start happening though and the plot takes a while to progress. There were a few plot twists which were good and foreshadowed well, but I had predicted them quite early on.
The main flaw in the plot is the amount of clichĂ©s and tropes it has. Having read a lot of YA, I knew the exact direction in which this book would go in when I was about 50 pages in. It wasnât exactly a bad thing considering I was still invested regardless of this, but there isnât much in this book that makes it very different from the other YA books that exist.
We have several overused tropes like âthe morally-grey prince who doesnât really want to be cruelâ, âa king who isnât really rulingâ, âan orphan girl looking to rebel and get vengeanceâ and clichĂ©s like âthe male character getting flustered when the female character enters in a gownâ and âthe female character getting flushed when the male character takes his shirt off as he is injuredâ etc. These donât bother me as much, but if they bother you I think you will be annoyed by this book.
Apart from all of this, I liked the plot a lot and the other elements of the story do make up for these stereotypes in YA.
âThere are too many layers here. I thought it was as simple as right or wrong . . . âbut itâs not.â
The world building of Defy the Night was excellently done. It isnât info-dumped (thankfully!) and the map was a great addition to the book. We donât really explore much apart from Kandala, but I am expecting to see more of the world in the sequels.
âAll this time Iâve thought that the people within the gates were the most powerful, but maybe I was wrong. We all have power.â
The writing was my favourite part of the book. Brigid Kemmererâs writing and her ability to tell a great story has never failed to amaze me, and Defy the Night was no exception. The pacing in Brigid Kemmererâs books are always wonderfully done and the 500 pages didnât feel like a drag at all. The writing isn't over the top or filled with purple prose, but its not dry either. It's subdued, which is perfect for this book and the tone it is going for.
âWe buy what we can from the taxes we collect, and we distribute it among the people. But there is never enough: not enough silver, not enough Moonflower.â
The characters were properly-written, and I would say they are three-dimensional. The side-characters didnât really play any big role though, which was quite disappointing.
âŒTessa
âIâm not a killer. I heal people; I donât harm them.â
Tessa is an apothecary, and also the one who steals Moonflower for the sick and poor of the village, along with her friend Wes. They are the Robin Hoodâs of Kandala, and rob from the rich to give them to the poor.
âI keep notes in my fatherâs notebooks of what cures the feversâthe Moonflowerâand what doesnât: everything else.â
I liked Tessa as a character. She is strong, rellistant and kind. I liked the role she played in the book, but despite all of this I felt something was lacking about her character arc. There is a lot of character development, but my main problem was the lack of relationships she has with other people. I know not all people are that social, but when the only relationship Tessa has is a romance, it isnât a good look.
âWe donât discuss what could happen, because Iâm right. The king wouldnât care that weâre stealing to help people. If weâre caught, weâll be executed right next to the smugglers.â
Tessa doesnât interact with many people apart from her love interest, and she only has one friend who she says she doesnât trust. She essentially doesnât communicate with that many people on page, and I wish that wasnât the case. I understand why it must have been hard for her to make friends, but Tessa has the kind of personality that is very open and loving, so this is quite contradictory to how she is portrayed.
âI wonder if this is why itâs so easy for the royal elites to ignore the people outside the walls of this sector. Are we all invisible to them?â
In fact, everyone says they trust her a lot (rightfully so, as she is one of the main reasons they are not dead yet) but we donât get to see much of that on page, though we do get some moments. I guess it would have been difficult to portray all of that on page, but it would have been a lot more interesting if Tessa had friends and relations apart from the romance as well. Apart from this, I enjoyed reading about Tessa's character.
âKindness leaves you vulnerable, Tessa. I learned that lesson years ago.â
âŒCorrick
âI have heard every manner of scream without flinching. I have listened to promises and threats and curses and liesâand occasionally, the truth.
I have never hesitated in doing what needs to be done.â
Prince Corrick is the Kingâs Justice, the one responsible for bringing justice to the kingdom and enforcing order in Kandala.
âto my face, Iâm Your Highness, or Prince Corrick, or sometimes, when theyâre being especially formal, the Kingâs Justice.â
He is also the morally-grey character that dreads all the violence he has to do, yet he has no choice but to do everything and ~follow orders~. I know, you are thinking 'Bhavya, this trope has been done so many times before!' Yes it has, but this is one of my favourite tropes in books and I always have a soft spot for this kind of character, but I only like it if it is well done.
âBecause despite all outward appearances, Iâm not cruel. I donât delight in pain. I donât delight in any of this.â
Corrickâs character arc was so well written and was so subtly done. The whole âi am pretending to be cruel and heartless when in reality i am a sweet cinnamon roll who means no harm, but i will hurt you if you mess with me or my loved onesâ wasnât rubbed in our face. Corrickâs mental dilemma isnât filled with petty angst. It didnât bore me at all. Instead we get a beautiful blend of court politics, betrayal and a desperate man doing what he needs to do for everyone to survive. He was definitely my favourite character and I loved him.
âIâll never be free of this. Of who I am. This will be my life as Kingâs Justice: Cruel Corrick, the most feared man in the kingdom, and somehow also the most alone.â
Character Dynamics
âŒWes & Tessa
Wes and Tessa had such a sweet bond, and I was smiling every time they were on page.
âI wish Weston were here. Iâm better with the medicines, with the dosages and the treatments and our patients, but heâs better in the face of violence and danger. Heâs cool and reserved when Iâm hot and rattled.â
I donât have much to say about them without spoiling something, so I will just say that they were a moment of light in a much darker book.
âŒCorrick & Harristan
I loved the brotherly bond between Corrick and Harristan.
âThey respect my brotherâas they should.
They fear me.
I donât mind. It spares me some tedious conversations.â
It was so well written. Corrick and Harristan love each other very much, and it was wonderful to read about how they supported and trusted each other.
There is another great character dynamic in this book, but I wonât be talking about it here to avoid spoilers!
âBut weâre still taking action. Weâre not backing down from that horrible king and his awful, cruel brother. Weâre saving the people who need saving.
Fight back. We are.â
In short, Defy the Night is an action-packed YA fantasy novel- with a twinge of romance and court politics. While it has its flaw- like the tropes and clichĂ©s, it also has its strengths- like the incredible writing and good characters. I binged this book in a day and I can say I loved the experience. Iâm hoping the sequel comes out soon! Until then, we all have to wait and âmind our mettleâ. :)
âMind your mettle, Tessa.â
Buddy read with Nashita. Thank you so much for reading it with me!
Review written and uploaded on 15th September, 2021.
https://linktr.ee/bhavyasbookreads- Linktree
P.S.- I tried something different for this review. Feel free to me know your thoughts on which format you prefer!
DISCLAIMER-All opinions on books Iâve read and reviewed are my own, and are with no intention to offend anyone. If you feel offended by my reviews, let me know how I can fix it.
How I Rate-
1 star- Hardly liked anything/ was disappointed
2 star- Had potential but did not deliver/ was disappointed
3 stars- Was ok but could have been better/ was average / Enjoyed a lot but something was missing
4 stars- Loved a lot but something was missing
5 stars- Loved it/ new favourite
............................................
And another 5 star read from Brigid Kemmerer. Review to come.
âŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠ
Going to start this today!
..............................................
I AM WAITING. 11 MORE DAYS.
âŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠ..
OMG WE GOT A COVER AAAAAHHHHHH
It looks nice, but I liked ACSDAL covers more...
Graphic: Child death, Death, Panic attacks/disorders, Rape, Sexual assault, Torture, Violence, Blood, Death of parent, and Murder
Moderate: Mental illness, Grief, Fire/Fire injury, Alcohol, and War
Minor: Self harm and Suicidal thoughts