Cover
⏱️
Estimated Read Time
Approx. 14 Hours
Editor's Rating
β˜… 4.5

Fourth Wing

πŸ‘€Rebecca Yarros
Community Rating
β˜†β˜†β˜†β˜†β˜† 0.0 (0 ratings)
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Published2023-05-02
SeriesThe Empyrean β€” Book 1 of 5
GenreFantasy, Romance, Fiction
LanguageEnglish
PublisherEntangled: Red Tower Books
ISBN-101649374046
ISBN-13978-1649374042

πŸ“Honest Review

i picked this up because everyone was talking about it and i wanted to understand what was actually happening with it. sometimes a book gets that level of attention and you read it and you can see exactly why and you feel a bit embarrassed that you were sceptical. this is one of those times.

Violet Sorrengail is twenty years old and small and not physically strong and was supposed to go into the Scribe Quadrant at Basgiath War College where she would spend her life around books and historical documents. her mother is a general and has other ideas. she gets pushed into the Riders Quadrant where students spend their first year trying not to die before they bond with a dragon and begin actual training. the drop out rate is brutal. the death rate among first years is something nobody in the book talks about comfortably.

the setup works because Yarros commits to the stakes. people actually die. not just background characters. people you have spent time with. the Riders Quadrant is genuinely dangerous and Violet being physically disadvantaged is not just a character detail that gets forgotten after the first fifty pages. it shapes everything about how she moves through the world she has been thrown into.
Xaden Riorson is the other major character and he is the kind of love interest that fantasy romance readers have very strong opinions about. he is powerful and dangerous and not entirely on Violet's side and the reason for that is built into the world's history in a way that is actually interesting rather than just being there to create friction. i found him more compelling than a lot of similar characters in similar books because Yarros gives him a consistent internal logic. the things he does make sense for who he is even when they are frustrating.

the romance itself is a slow burn that pays off in the way slow burns are supposed to and i think this is where the book is strongest. Yarros understands that the tension between two people who want each other and cannot fully trust each other is more interesting than resolution and she holds that tension for most of the book. when things do develop it feels earned because you have been inside both of their heads long enough to understand what it costs them.

the dragon bonding is one of my favourite things in here. each dragon has a personality and specific things they will and will not tolerate and the relationship between a rider and their dragon is not just a power upgrade. it is a real bond with real terms and watching Violet navigate her bonding is genuinely moving in a way i did not expect. Tairn is a brilliant creation and Andarna is even better.

the world building is large and complicated and i want to be honest that some of it did not fully come together for me until well into the second half. Yarros is building a mythology that is clearly going to span five books and sometimes in this first one you can feel the weight of all the things she is not telling you yet. that is mostly a good thing because it keeps you reading but occasionally it tips into frustrating when something that seems important is dropped without explanation.

the writing has rough patches. i said it in the what i did not like section and i want to say it again here because i think it is worth being specific. the prose itself is not always working as hard as the story is. there are passages that feel like a first draft and some of the dialogue is clunky in a way that better editing could have fixed. this does not stop the book from being deeply readable. it just stops it from being the kind of reading experience where every sentence feels considered. Yarros is a storyteller first and a prose stylist second and if you can make peace with that you will have a very good time with this.

i read it over two days and i resented the parts of my life that required me to put it down. the second book Iron Flame is already sitting on my shelf and i am going to get to it shortly. that is the real review. the book made me want more of the world immediately and that is not a small thing.

Summary:

Violet Sorrengail was supposed to spend her life quietly among books in the Scribe Quadrant. then her mother, a commanding general, orders her into the Riders Quadrant instead where students train to bond with dragons and most of them do not survive the first year. the book is a fantasy romance set in a war college and it moves fast. Xaden Riorson is the love interest and he is exactly the kind of person you would want watching your back and also cannot fully trust and the tension between those two things carries the whole story.

πŸ’‘ Context Behind The Book

Rebecca Yarros is an American author born in 1981. she has written over fifteen novels across romance and fantasy and is a number one New York Times bestseller several times over. she is married to a military veteran and has six children including three who were adopted from foster care. she has spoken openly about writing through chronic illness. the Empyrean series starting with Fourth Wing became one of the biggest publishing events of 2023 and a TV series is currently in development at MGM Amazon Studios.

βœ… What I Liked

the pacing is the thing i keep coming back to. this book moves. Yarros knows how to write a chapter ending that makes you feel like you physically cannot put it down and she does it over and over again without it feeling cheap. Violet is a genuinely good protagonist because she is not secretly strong in a way nobody notices. she knows what her limitations are and she works around them and through them and you respect her for it. Xaden is the kind of morally grey love interest the fantasy romance genre does best and the tension between him and Violet is handled really well for most of the book. the dragon bonding scenes are also just flat out fun and i say that as someone who would not normally describe themselves as a dragon person. the world building is big and complicated but Yarros introduces it at a pace that does not overwhelm you early on.

❌ What Could Be Better

the writing itself is not always at the level of the storytelling. there are lines in here that feel like they belong in a very early draft and sometimes the dialogue is doing too much explaining of things the characters would already know just to make sure the reader is following along. the world has some logic gaps that got more noticeable on reflection than they were during reading. a few of the side characters feel thin in a way that matters more as the series continues because you need to care about them and i was not always sure i did. the romance also moves faster than it probably should given the amount of suspicion and secrecy between the two of them and some readers will find the resolution of that tension a bit too easy. these are not reasons not to read it but they are reasons it sits at four stars for me rather than five.

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