Sunday, April 12, 2026

Review: Servant of Earth by Sarah Hawley

Servant of Earth by Sarah Hawley
Series: The Shards of Magic #1
Publication date: November 12th, 2024
Pages: 464
Spice: 🌶️🌶️🌶️

Synopsis:
In the underground Fae realm, only the strongest and most ruthless have power--but a young human woman forced into a life of servitude is about to change everything.

Kenna Heron is best known in her village for being a little wild--some say half feral--but she'll need every ounce of that ferocity to survive captivity in the cruel Fae court.

Trapped as a servant in the faeries' underground kingdom of Mistei, Kenna must help her new mistress undertake six deadly trials, one for each branch of magic: Fire, Earth, Light, Void, Illusion, and Blood. If she succeeds, her mistress will gain immortality and become the heir to Earth House. If she doesn't, the punishment is death--for both mistress and servant.

With no ally but a sentient dagger of mysterious origins, Kenna must face monsters, magic, and grueling physical tests. But worse dangers wait underground, and soon Kenna gets caught up in a secret rebellion against the inventively sadistic faerie king. When her feelings for the rebellion's leader turn passionate, Kenna must decide if she's willing to risk her life for a better world and a chance at happiness.

Surviving the trials and overthrowing a tyrant king will take cunning, courage, and an iron will... but even that may not be enough.


Available at:



Story:
I am always a sucker for a story that has a house system that reminds of me Harry Potter's houses. This book was no exception. It had houses based off the Fae house's elements: Earth, Fire, Void, Light, Illusion, and Blood. I loved watching Kenna put aside her own fear of the unknown and dive head first into the ritual that her best friend was going on to the Fae kingdom. Her character was made of stronger things than any other character in the cast. She was willing to put her life at risk for the people she cared about and tried to walk the razor's edge of remaining loyal to her house but also to her heart even if she may be trusting the wrong people. The rebellion seemed like it was falling apart as more and more fae and underfae were killed when found in connection with it. I liked the ACOTAR-esque live triangle even if I have to say I was a hundred percent Team Rhys--er, I mean Kellan, from the start. The author was able to make her world something that was never lacking in mysteries and wonders. I ate up every single aspect that Kenna uncovered throughout the story. I don't think there is anything that he author could have done to make any of it any better because it was already so thoroughly thought out that I can't offer any advice on changes.

Character(s):
There are a lot of characters in the story but I will stick to the main protagonists.
  • Kenna - She was the strongest female protagonist I have seen in years of reading. She was able to mitigate her new life as a servant of Earth house where she was expected to help her mistress pass her immortality trials without anyone finding out or be killed. While hanging in there with her mistress, Lara, she also caught the eye of the Fire Prince who wanted her to help him plot a rebellion against the Fae's tyrannical king, Osric. And then on top of that she was meant to pass along information to the Void Prince who seemed to have an unhealthy obsession with the Fire Prince Kenna is growing closer and closer to. Kenna had a lot of people all depending on her while also threatening her well-being. Add in her grief over the loss of her best friend and her new life amongst the Fae she is astoundingly strong. She came from nothing but found a way to roll with the punches and keep herself alive despite it all. Hopefully her strong morals and willingness to see past social ranks will rub off on the stobby Fae.
  • Drustan - The egomaniac Fire Prince who wants to lead a rebellion against the king and needs Kenna's help. I wanted to like him. I wanted to root for the couple. They seemed into each other but there was something about Drustan that reminded me of Tamsyn in ACOTAR. How the character could go from sweet and charming to completely cold and willing to step over anyone he needed to to get where he wanted... I was not a fan of any of that. I had a strong feeling that Kenna was investing far too much of her heart and Drustan was going to break it. He was one of the characters where you are meant to feel questionably about him, otherwise a love triangle would never be intriguing.
  • Kellan - Tall, dark and handsome with a stoic tone and a dangerous smirk. He becomes Kenna's shadow despite him demanding she finds things out for him and report back. He seems to always know what Kenna is going to bring to him and that makes me think that the only reason he is even involving her is because it gives him an excuse to be around her. I think she interests him and I think that just means he has really good taste. I would like to see her with Kellan over Drustan to be honest. Darkness for her own savior mentality. Opposites that become harmony. 
Writing:
I can't find anything wrong with the way, Sarah Hawley wrote. If anything I was awed by how spectacular her vocabulary was. To be able to actually find words that I don't recognize with the amount of reading I do made me enjoy it even more. She exacted a perfect balance of comedy, drama, action, and romance that weaved a tapestry around me as a reader and thoroughly engulfed me. I almost wish there were some typos or questionable story structure that I could harp on so I didn't continue to only be able to come up with compliments for the author. 

Overall:
I feel like I keep stumbling across absolute stellar reads without even trying. The amount of 5-star reads I have had recently have been impressive and this book is amongst those others. The setting, the storytelling, the characters, the factors of the world created, the drama, heartbreak, love, and heat was almost too much good for one book. I was overwhelmed with the tapestry of the Shards of Magic's first book and cannot wait to read the next one.


 

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Review: All Rhodes Lead Here by Mariana Zapata

All Rhodes Lead Here by Mariana Zapata
Publication date: January 30th, 2024
Pages: 606
Spice: 🌶️🌶️

Synopsis:
The people we lose take a part of us with them... but they leave a part of themselves with us too.

Aurora De La Torre, or Ora to her friends, knows moving back to Pagosa Springs, Colorado, a place that was once home and is now full of bittersweet memories of her late mother, isn't going to be easy. Starting your whole life over probably isn't supposed to be.

But after breaking up with her longtime, famous musician boyfriend, hiding out in a small town in the mountains might be the perfect remedy for a broken heart. And checking out her landlord who lives across the driveway just might cure it, too.

Only Tobias Rhodes didn't rent out the apartment to her, rather it was his teenage son, Amos. Fiercely protective of his family and distrusting of strangers, gruff and grumpy Rhodes initially keeps little miss sunshine Ora at a distance. But over days and weeks, long hikes and fireside chats, Aurora breaks down his walls and soon an unbreakable friendship blossoms into a once-in-a-lifetime love.



Available at:


Story:
Mariana Zapata has a way of creating these worlds that seem so utterly unique from any of her books but they all have the same comedic timing and easy flow that makes them obviously one of her works. Watching a young woman try to pick up the pieces after a breakup and try to rekindle the connection she had with her deceased mother while dealing with a silver fox that wants away from her as quickly as possible embodies the perfect balance of grumpy/sunshine romance. The beatific little down that Aurora finds herself in after a life of living in the shadows of her rockstar boyfriend was perfect for her and set the foundation for a light and fluffy romance novel with a little bit of mournful edge that makes a reader laugh between the tears soaking their cheeks. I had a little bit of trouble figuring out the ghosts from Aurora's past suddenly coming around when she finds her footing within her new home. I feel like the reasons for their sudden appearances was a little shaky and it made me feel like the author was trying to make a square peg fit in a round hole. They needed to be there to add drama but the reasoning the author chose for their appearances was a little unusual. It caused me to side-eye the plot points for a moment or ten. If the connection between Aurora and Tobias wasn't so absolutely droolworthy the rating of the story might have suffered for that reason alone. I have read a few of Zapata's stories and I know how tightly she can wind the knots of a good plot, this one seems like it could easily unravel and that makes one a bit off kilter the entire time they are reading.

Character(s):
  • Aurora - I liked how carefree and indulgent the character seemed to be. She was about as sunny a sunshine character as you could get. Not many things got her down and when they did it was like the storm clouds had settled over the entire fictional world. There were points where I was able to see the heart of Aurora and it was beautiful to witness. She was such a genuine character that even when she did something wrong I was desperately trying to make excuses for her so that I didn't have to admit that the character had messed up. Aurora felt like the best friend everyone hopes to have at least once in her life.
  • Tobias - I knew he was meant to be the grumpy man that Aurora had to earn the trust of to get to open up but, boy, did Tobias make it difficult for her to understand what he was feeling for her and accept that his sallow expressions were products of her doing. He had been hurt in the past and made quick judgments of Aurora that I could understand, but when he was being nasty to her for no reason except that she existed I wanted to watch her find someone better. He didn't deserve the sunshine that Zapata had created! He was being a grade-A asshole! But... the softer moments he had made him potentially salvageable. I was dying for them to get together and his grumpy attitude was ruining things for me. I was frustrated! But he eventually worked his way to where he needed to be emotionally. 
Writing:
There were a few moments within the writing that I found to be a little oddly written but overall I think it accomplished what it was supposed to. Like I said before about some of the reasoning using for some of the antagonists was a little weak but that wasn't in the practical sense of the writing. Instead I found Zapata was able to write in a way that a reader could relax into and not have to exert their brains too much to follow the dialog and story. With adulting the way it is sometimes it's nice to have books you can shut your chaotic brain off and just relax into a lightly humor story of growth and finding love where you least expect it.

Overall:
I will always have a soft spot for a male lead that is a silver fox. So often the main characters are Hollywood level handsome instead of the classically rugged appearance. That coupled with a female main character who is tough as nails but hides it easily behind effervescent smiles and a big heart. This was a great light read that would go well with a warm cup of coffee and a cozy blanket while sitting out on the porch.