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A review by lncolgate
Divine Rivals by Rebecca Ross
adventurous
dark
emotional
hopeful
sad
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
5.0
Stellar read! Just exquisite! Emotionally wrecked throughout and by the end!
Rebecca Ross has fantastic prose writing. Beautiful sentences -gorgeous imagery and metaphors. Draws out pure emotion while reading —never forced, never saccharine, never this is how you’re SUPPOSED to feel. You just feel all the characters emotions intensely.
The book reads as both fantasy and historical fiction. The fantasy is magical realism rather than traditional swords and sorcery or even steampunk. It’s effortless blend. The world feels so real and akin to our own. I can’t help but think of contemporary events going on and how people experiencing the effects of war directly would feel reading this.
Every main character is well developed. Hell even the bit characters you remember. There’s not too many and they’re all interconnected with Roman and Iris’s story.
The letters are so beautifully written. Man haven’t read a contemporary epistolary novel like that in a long time; honestly can’t remember if I’ve read one outside Dracula, Little Women, and Pride and Prejudice and Sense and Sensibility. So much thought and care put into them. Again, it all feels so real-ironic given it’s a fantasy novel where I’m not normally looking for realism. Emotions and stories they tell one another are just pure, unfiltered.
The story is tragic, exciting, and full of emotion. I wolfed it down from start to finish. I couldn’t get enough. Felt like I didn’t want to stop to breathe at times. I forgive even the massive cliffhanger ending because this book is just that good. I feel Ross does close one arc—the relationship and romance between Iris and Roman. The start and the culmination of it. Now we have a trial—a quest. It’s an epic romance sure to endure the rest of time.
Rebecca Ross has fantastic prose writing. Beautiful sentences -gorgeous imagery and metaphors. Draws out pure emotion while reading —never forced, never saccharine, never this is how you’re SUPPOSED to feel. You just feel all the characters emotions intensely.
The book reads as both fantasy and historical fiction. The fantasy is magical realism rather than traditional swords and sorcery or even steampunk. It’s effortless blend. The world feels so real and akin to our own. I can’t help but think of contemporary events going on and how people experiencing the effects of war directly would feel reading this.
Every main character is well developed. Hell even the bit characters you remember. There’s not too many and they’re all interconnected with Roman and Iris’s story.
The letters are so beautifully written. Man haven’t read a contemporary epistolary novel like that in a long time; honestly can’t remember if I’ve read one outside Dracula, Little Women, and Pride and Prejudice and Sense and Sensibility. So much thought and care put into them. Again, it all feels so real-ironic given it’s a fantasy novel where I’m not normally looking for realism. Emotions and stories they tell one another are just pure, unfiltered.
The story is tragic, exciting, and full of emotion. I wolfed it down from start to finish. I couldn’t get enough. Felt like I didn’t want to stop to breathe at times. I forgive even the massive cliffhanger ending because this book is just that good. I feel Ross does close one arc—the relationship and romance between Iris and Roman. The start and the culmination of it. Now we have a trial—a quest. It’s an epic romance sure to endure the rest of time.
Graphic: Death, Violence, Grief, Death of parent, War, and Injury/Injury detail