The Storm Crow by Kalyn Josephson

The Storm Crow (Storm Crow, #1)

by Kalyn Josephson

The first book in Kalyn Josephson's "must-read" (Adrienne Young) Storm Crow duology, a YA fantasy series that follows a fallen princess who ignites a rebellion, perfect for fans of Sarah J. Maas, Leigh Bardugo and And I Darken.

Princess Thia was born to be a crow rider―a warrior. In her kingdom of Rhodaire, magical elemental crows keep the city running. But when the Illucian empire invades, they kill all the crows in a horrible fire that also robs Thia of her mother and mentor.

Then Thia's sister, Caliza, becomes the new queen of Rhodaire, she is forced to agree to a marriage between Thia and the Illucian heir in an effort to save her people. Prince Ericen is rude and cruel and Thia can't imagine traveling into the heart of an enemy city after so much has been taken from her.

But before she leaves, she finds a crow egg in the rubble of the rookery. Deep in the heart of Ilucia she must hatch the last crow, hold her own against the crown prince, and ignite a rebellion to take back what is hers.

Reviewed by kalventure on

5 of 5 stars

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Join Lauren and I as we co-host the Books and Tea Discord Book Club's readalong in June 2020
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Words cannot express how much I loved this book. I loved this book so much that I bought a finished copy when I was only 10% into my eARC.
You can read my full review on my blog!
Here are my thoughts in bullet points:
- The depression rep means the world to me.
- Amazing sibling relationship.
- Great female friendship!
- lgbqiap+ rep (f/f and m/m) - it's casually gay
- Fast-paced and engaging writing. I really connected with the writing style -- very descriptive, I felt like I was there in the room.
- Features political machinations, racial tensions, lush worldbuilding with glimpses of culture for each of the areas that are woven into the narrative without ever feeling like an infodump. There is also an origin myth included, which was so wonderful.
- I only wish I understood the magic a bit more and that crows were described visually at the start of the book.
- I loved the nuance with comments like "feathers in my stomach" to root everything in their belief system and the importance of the crows to Rhodaire.
- The narrative touches on cycles of violence and vengeance carrying on through generations.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 13 July, 2019: Finished reading
  • 13 July, 2019: Reviewed
  • Started reading
  • Finished reading
  • 13 July, 2019: Reviewed