2 star

ARC Review: Cruel is the Light by Sophie Clark

An epic new fantasy about a demon hunter and a foot soldier thrown together in a centuries-old war… and the forbidden love that could change the course of history.

A bloody war between demons and the Vatican has waged for more than a century, with two elite soldiers now at its center: Selene Alleva, a high-ranking exorcist running from a dark family legacy, and orphan Jules Lacroix, recruited by the Vatican and unrivalled on the battlefield.

When their paths cross over a series of unprecedented demon attacks, the distrust–and unwelcome attraction–they have for each other is immediate. But to get to the bottom of the breaches they strike an uneasy alliance to avoid suspicion. With Jules posing as Selene’s estranged fiance, they head to the Vatican in search of answers. But even as Selene questions who her most dangerous enemy is, Jules has begun to suspect that it’s him.

Now Jules’ very existence challenges every truth Selene thought she knew, and suggests a terrible conspiracy at the heart of the Vatican. Unable to ignore their growing feelings, the two must make an impossible choice between love and duty.

They say love conquers all – but can it win in a war between demons and exorcists? Or will it tear them apart…



**Cruel is the Light comes out May 20, 2025**

Thank you to Penguin Random House Canada for this copy in exchange for an honest review.

This book had such an intriguing premise, and perhaps at just the most perfect time in the current news as well with the Catholic church. Regardless though, this book just did not deliver in any way. I thought maybe it was just me, but I think after scouring a couple of other reviews, I don’t think I’m the only one who was left confused in this story.

Cruel is the Light is about a war between demons and humanity, “exorcists” who use magic to fight off demons. If you’re thinking some sort of video game premise, you’re basically on the nose. This story revolves around our two main characters, Jules and Selene. Selene is an exorcist who is very powerful due to a mysterious reason. Jules is an orphan soldier, who is also powerful . . . due to a mysterious reason. They serendipitously meet in a demon war-ravaged Vatican, and so their relationship and journey begins. Both are intrigued by the other’s power, and how it could be beneficial to them.

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4.5 star

ARC Review: A Forgery of Fate by Elizabeth Lim

A breathtaking romantic fantasy inspired by Beauty and the Beast about a girl who paints the future and a cursed dragon lord, bound by love and deception in a plot to bring down the gods.

From the New York Times bestselling author of Six Crimson Cranes!

Truyan Saigas didn’t choose to become a con artist, but after her father is lost at sea, it’s up to her to support her mother and two younger sisters. A gifted art forger, Tru has the unique ability to paint the future, but even such magic is not enough to put her family back together again, or stave off the gangsters demanding payment in blood for her mother’s gambling debts.

Left with few options, Tru agrees to a marriage contract with a mysterious dragon lord. He offers a fresh start for her mother and sisters and elusive answers about her father’s disappearance, but in exchange, she must join him in his desolate undersea palace. And she must assist him in a plot to infiltrate the tyrannical Dragon King’s inner circle, painting a future so treasonous, it could upend both the mortal and immortal realms. . . .



**A Forgery of Fate comes out June 3, 2025**

Thank you to Penguin Random House Canada for this copy in exchange for an honest review.

I haven’t read Six Crimson Cranes, but reading this synopsis, I knew I had to read this. I love any myth retelling, and fairytale retellings are a close second. Retellings are always a great chance to show off an author’s creativity, since the original story (or stories) have some level of restrictions before it’s not even close to the same story anymore. I have always enjoyed the same story from a different perspective, or a “side story” that is fully explored. I really enjoy the elements that the authors put in that makes you immediately think of the original story, and I definitely chase that feeling in these kinds of books.

And this book does not fail to deliver. Advertised as a Beauty and the Beast retelling, the author also puts in that there are many other elements of other stories that she weaves in, and I completely believe it. Every aspect of this story feels like a myth or a story from somewhere, and I really enjoyed that whimsical feeling. The protagonist was also a strong lead, and it didn’t feel like she was left to the whims of the story, but that rather she drove her own story—something you don’t find in most fairytales.

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