Advance Review: Furyborn (Empirium #1) by Claire Legrand

Furyborn (Empirium, #1)Furyborn by Claire Legrand
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Follows two fiercely independent young women, centuries apart, who hold the power to save their world…or doom it.

When assassins ambush her best friend, the crown prince, Rielle Dardenne risks everything to save him, exposing her ability to perform all seven kinds of elemental magic. The only people who should possess this extraordinary power are a pair of prophesied queens: a queen of light and salvation and a queen of blood and destruction. To prove she is the Sun Queen, Rielle must endure seven trials to test her magic. If she fails, she will be executed…unless the trials kill her first.

A thousand years later, the legend of Queen Rielle is a mere fairy tale to bounty hunter Eliana Ferracora. When the Undying Empire conquered her kingdom, she embraced violence to keep her family alive. Now, she believes herself untouchable–until her mother vanishes without a trace, along with countless other women in their city. To find her, Eliana joins a rebel captain on a dangerous mission and discovers that the evil at the heart of the empire is more terrible than she ever imagined.

As Rielle and Eliana fight in a cosmic war that spans millennia, their stories intersect, and the shocking connections between them ultimately determine the fate of their world–and of each other.

Furyborn starts out with magic, intrigue, and the earthly/human and heavenly/angelic realms colliding. The story sets up slow, spanning a thousand years, and absolutely not pulling any punches. Fans of The Queen of The Tearling will enjoy this book, but it requires patience and the investment of your curiosity in a series that is only just beginning.

I liked this book (thanks Netgalley!), but I have to be honest, it took me entirely too long to figure out what the heck was going on (as evidenced by my Goodreads update at 20%). There are so many story elements that are set up quickly, and the plot spans quite large, jumping back and forth between character viewpoints is a bit dizzymaking.

I didn’t love the protagonist, Eliana Ferracora, mostly due to the inconsistency in her nature – which is deliberate, I’ll argue, and hints at future growth. Also the way her name is pronounced is the way people always mispronounced my friend Eylyana’s name growing up. So that is my bias. Rielle is set up to be unlikeable as well, in my opinion.

I’m not dying to read the next book, but I certainly am very curious to see where this saga takes its readers. Not a solid four stars. Maybe like 3.75.

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