Nightbirds by Kate J. Armstrong

Nightbirds (Nightbirds, #1)

by Kate J. Armstrong

AN INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER • In a dazzling new fantasy world full of whispered secrets and political intrigue, the magic of women is outlawed but four girls with unusual powers have the chance to change it all.

Magic is illegal in Simta, but for the right price, the wealthy can always partake. They need only procure a visit with a Nightbird, girls who can gift their rare powers with a kiss. Usually a tight-knit group, this Season’s Nightbirds couldn’t be more different. Matilde, the group’s veteran, relishes the feeling of power and freedom she thinks her Nightbird status affords, but rebels against her family’s growing expectation that she finally choose a suitor and pass her magic on to the next generation; fiery orphan Sayer, resigned to this life as a means to support herself, resents each transaction and the world Matilde so reveres; and novice Æsa, fears her own magic and thinks her very existence is a sin.

But when the Nightbirds find themselves at the heart of a deadly political scheme that shakes the world as they know it, they must put their differences aside and band together to fend off those who would exploit them. In doing so, they discover their magic is more powerful than they could have ever imagined, and they see the Nightbirds system for what it is: a gilded cage. United, they are a potent force that could upend the patriarchal system that would hunt them as witches. But wielding their power could cost them more than they are prepared to lose. They must make a choice: to remain kept birds or take control, remaking the city that dared to clip their wings.

Fiercely feminist and set in a thrilling, intoxicating world evoking the Jazz Age—full of speakeasies with magic cocktails, sharp-edged, duplicitous glamour, and handsome rogue alchemists—Nightbirds is an exciting debut fantasy that dazzles as powerful girls emerge from the shadows to determine their own fates.

Reviewed by ladygrey on

3 of 5 stars

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The lush worldbuilding is imaginative and beautiful out of the gate. It was enough to draw me in but not enough to hold my interest. I mean, I kept reading. But I put the book down at about the end of the second act and didn't pick it up again for days, which isn't like me. Part of it is that even though it's a beautifully evoked world it's a seedy story, which isn't my style. Part of it is that the characters aren't that compelling. Their mediocre at best. Part of it is that I listened to Armstrong's “PubDates” podcast with Amie Kaufman a little and Armstrong talks a good bit about the characters and romance (in the episodes I listened to) but then I don't really see that playing out in the story. So it feels like she had these ideas or things she wanted to do or was trying to do but that aren't actually there in the story. At least not yet.

Also writing in present tense third person is an unorthodox choice. I don’t hate it, but I don’t see the point of it either. Still, the writing skill is there enough to make this a decent read. The story has the potential for so much more depth than it achieved. And it was missing something that would pull me in to be immersed in the story, but I’m not sure what. I think maybe emotion. Things are described well enough but I never felt anything, which is maybe what pulls you out of reality into a story. I don’t know. But Nightbirds didn't have it. 

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Reading updates

  • 7 June, 2023: Started reading
  • 7 June, 2023: on page 0 out of 480 0%
  • 16 June, 2023: Finished reading
  • 7 June, 2023: Reviewed