


desertcart.co.jp: EMPYREAN #1:FOURTH WING(B) (The Empyrean) : YARROS, REBECCA: Foreign Language Books Review: Couldn’t put it down - I doubted the craze online but the story was actually really good. Good world concept, good writing! Review: I was not ready for this - I'll admit it—I was skeptical. The hype around Fourth Wing felt overwhelming, and I've been burned by overhyped fantasy before. A friend sent me a copy to my Kindle, and I thought I was safe. Turns out, I just hadn't met Xaden Riorson yet. Yarros doesn't waste time easing you into this world. You're dropped onto the parapet with Violet Sorrengail, discovering everything as she fights to survive her first minutes at Basgiath War College. No lengthy exposition, no gentle world-building—just immediate stakes and the visceral understanding that people die here. The writing has this modern edge to it, cursing and all, that makes the brutality feel uncomfortably real rather than romantically distant. What hooked me was Violet herself. Her mother—a ruthless general—forces her to abandon her dreams of becoming a scribe and throws her into the Riders Quadrant, where most cadets don't survive their first year. Violet has a condition that makes her bones brittle, so even crossing the entrance parapet is nearly impossible. But she doesn't survive on luck. She survives through strategy, adaptability, and sheer stubborn will. Watching her navigate a system designed to kill her—outsmarting opponents who could easily overpower her physically—that's where the real tension lives. These aren't kids playing at being warriors. They're adults facing mortality, and Violet's realization that the academy's rules are rigged against her adds layers of institutional cruelty that make her victories feel earned. Then there's Xaden Riorson. His father led a rebellion and was executed by Violet's mother, leaving Xaden marked as a traitor's son. Their dynamic starts with genuine hatred—she literally hides knives to potentially kill him, and he calls her "Violence" with real venom. What I appreciated is how their relationship doesn't follow the typical enemies-to-lovers shortcut. The trust between them builds through training sessions and knife-sharpening lessons that are worth the price of admission alone. He believes in her capabilities when everyone else writes her off. When things turn physical, it matters because of everything they've been through together. Meanwhile, Dain—her childhood friend who seems safe and supportive—uses his signet to violate her memories without consent. That betrayal hit harder than any battle scene because it's manipulation disguised as protection. The dragons are everything. During the Threshing, cadets either bond with a dragon or get incinerated for being unworthy. Violet bonds with two—Tairn, this massive black dragon with zero patience for nonsense, and Andarna, a young golden dragon who shouldn't even be there. Their connection is unprecedented and makes Violet a target. The dragons aren't just mounts; they have distinct personalities, and their mental conversations with Violet add both humor and wisdom. The magic system gives each rider a unique signet, and when Violet discovers she can wield lightning while Andarna can manipulate time, it raises the stakes in ways that complicate her survival rather than making it easier. The story shifts from academy survival to something bigger when Violet goes beyond the kingdom's wards and sees what they've been hiding. Venin—humans corrupted by draining magic—and their wyvern creations are the real threat, not the neighboring kingdom they've been told to fear. The battle at Athebyne wrecked me. The battle scenes had me breathless, the betrayals gutted me, and Liam's death left me completely destroyed. He dies protecting Violet, and his loss feels like losing someone real. Then she discovers her supposedly dead brother is alive and part of a revolution, and suddenly everything she thought she knew unravels. Is it flawless? No. Some of the academy rules feel arbitrary, the world outside Basgiath remains underdeveloped, and certain tropes are familiar enough that you can see them coming. But the execution matters more than originality here. The pacing doesn't let you breathe, the emotional beats land because the relationships feel genuine, and Violet's physical limitations add weight to every choice she makes. Fourth Wing isn't trying to reinvent fantasy. It's taking familiar elements—dragons, magic schools, forbidden romance, political conspiracy—and executing them with enough character depth and emotional intensity that they feel fresh. Violet and Xaden's story got under my skin in a way I wasn't expecting. I finished it feeling emotionally wrung out, immediately started the sequel, and I'll be chasing that feeling until the next one. This book didn't just live up to the hype—it lit something in me I didn't realize I'd been missing. If you're still on the fence, clear your schedule and just read it.
| Amazon Bestseller | #538 in Foreign Language Books ( See Top 100 in Foreign Language Books ) #19 in Fantasy (Foreign Language Books) #109 in Literature & Fiction (Foreign Language Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (487,610) |
| Dimensions | 4.96 x 1.73 x 7.72 inches |
| ISBN-10 | 0349437017 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0349437019 |
| Item Weight | 365 g |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 100 pages |
| Publication date | March 26, 2024 |
| Publisher | LITTLE BROWN UK |
ム**ラ
Couldn’t put it down
I doubted the craze online but the story was actually really good. Good world concept, good writing!
K**O
I was not ready for this
I'll admit it—I was skeptical. The hype around Fourth Wing felt overwhelming, and I've been burned by overhyped fantasy before. A friend sent me a copy to my Kindle, and I thought I was safe. Turns out, I just hadn't met Xaden Riorson yet. Yarros doesn't waste time easing you into this world. You're dropped onto the parapet with Violet Sorrengail, discovering everything as she fights to survive her first minutes at Basgiath War College. No lengthy exposition, no gentle world-building—just immediate stakes and the visceral understanding that people die here. The writing has this modern edge to it, cursing and all, that makes the brutality feel uncomfortably real rather than romantically distant. What hooked me was Violet herself. Her mother—a ruthless general—forces her to abandon her dreams of becoming a scribe and throws her into the Riders Quadrant, where most cadets don't survive their first year. Violet has a condition that makes her bones brittle, so even crossing the entrance parapet is nearly impossible. But she doesn't survive on luck. She survives through strategy, adaptability, and sheer stubborn will. Watching her navigate a system designed to kill her—outsmarting opponents who could easily overpower her physically—that's where the real tension lives. These aren't kids playing at being warriors. They're adults facing mortality, and Violet's realization that the academy's rules are rigged against her adds layers of institutional cruelty that make her victories feel earned. Then there's Xaden Riorson. His father led a rebellion and was executed by Violet's mother, leaving Xaden marked as a traitor's son. Their dynamic starts with genuine hatred—she literally hides knives to potentially kill him, and he calls her "Violence" with real venom. What I appreciated is how their relationship doesn't follow the typical enemies-to-lovers shortcut. The trust between them builds through training sessions and knife-sharpening lessons that are worth the price of admission alone. He believes in her capabilities when everyone else writes her off. When things turn physical, it matters because of everything they've been through together. Meanwhile, Dain—her childhood friend who seems safe and supportive—uses his signet to violate her memories without consent. That betrayal hit harder than any battle scene because it's manipulation disguised as protection. The dragons are everything. During the Threshing, cadets either bond with a dragon or get incinerated for being unworthy. Violet bonds with two—Tairn, this massive black dragon with zero patience for nonsense, and Andarna, a young golden dragon who shouldn't even be there. Their connection is unprecedented and makes Violet a target. The dragons aren't just mounts; they have distinct personalities, and their mental conversations with Violet add both humor and wisdom. The magic system gives each rider a unique signet, and when Violet discovers she can wield lightning while Andarna can manipulate time, it raises the stakes in ways that complicate her survival rather than making it easier. The story shifts from academy survival to something bigger when Violet goes beyond the kingdom's wards and sees what they've been hiding. Venin—humans corrupted by draining magic—and their wyvern creations are the real threat, not the neighboring kingdom they've been told to fear. The battle at Athebyne wrecked me. The battle scenes had me breathless, the betrayals gutted me, and Liam's death left me completely destroyed. He dies protecting Violet, and his loss feels like losing someone real. Then she discovers her supposedly dead brother is alive and part of a revolution, and suddenly everything she thought she knew unravels. Is it flawless? No. Some of the academy rules feel arbitrary, the world outside Basgiath remains underdeveloped, and certain tropes are familiar enough that you can see them coming. But the execution matters more than originality here. The pacing doesn't let you breathe, the emotional beats land because the relationships feel genuine, and Violet's physical limitations add weight to every choice she makes. Fourth Wing isn't trying to reinvent fantasy. It's taking familiar elements—dragons, magic schools, forbidden romance, political conspiracy—and executing them with enough character depth and emotional intensity that they feel fresh. Violet and Xaden's story got under my skin in a way I wasn't expecting. I finished it feeling emotionally wrung out, immediately started the sequel, and I'll be chasing that feeling until the next one. This book didn't just live up to the hype—it lit something in me I didn't realize I'd been missing. If you're still on the fence, clear your schedule and just read it.
S**A
Its good
It's good
S**E
Its so good!
It was really good, and the quality was amazing!
A**ー
それにしても、シビアな世界を描いているね。こんなにも、人の命が安い世界てのは、すごいよね。 ストーリーラインはかなりしっかりしているかな。ちょっとお手盛りなところも目につくけど、十分に我慢できる。
J**.
great read, refreshing lead
The characters are addictive to follow along even if I have a problem of guessing the plot twists. I don’t enjoy the “tell and not show” aspect of some of the writing style but that is easily brushed over by the number of refreshing characters and deviance from overdone tropes and some tropes that are just done well with new life breathed into them. Gonna pick up the next book as soon I finish this review because of that cursed cliffhanger.
S**8
Addictive!
I really love this book
L**A
Wonderful
Loved
S**I
Item came in good condition except for the top of the sprayed edges has some flaws.
S**B
Wow! It has been a LONG time since I have actually felt tension while reading a book. I can read the biggest action scenes at the end of various books and the majority of the time they just don't affect me at all - because I don't care that much about the characters. But THIS - this was different. I felt the tension. And it was real. Plus the author is very willing to kill characters so there is some uncertainty there as well. And the battle at the end of this most excellent book - it was hot and raging. Plus the enemy leaked danger as well. True menace. Very rarely does some enemy in a book impress me at all but this one most certainly did.. Right from the description I just KNEW there was something different about these mages called venin. They seemed impressive too. And very memorable. I wanted to draw them based off of the description. Very rarely do I get that urge. But what a battle at the end! It was touch and go. What would happen? Would the heroes win or lose? I didn't know. And I felt concern. This book has made me feel things. Earlier it had made me cry - tears of joy. And the book has surprised me too. The plot twists! I guess I should have seen it coming but I didn't so I was quite surprised. But it certainly makes the story way more interesting! And I am certainly eager to read the sequel too! This is a massive book and worth reading every word! And rarely do I feel that way. But its exciting and the characters face so many challenges. And there is death too. In fact there is a lot of death in here. Its a very violent world, a tough world of dragons and griffins and things that are supposed to be only legends to scare kids to eat their vegetables... But what I love the most in here in the main character Violet. She has a connective tissue disorder. I have one too (its called Ehlers Danlos Syndrome - EDS - and I am pretty confident that Violet actually has EDS). I have never run across a character in a book before that has EDS. And certainly not one that is bold enough to be in a fantasy world where she rides a dragon. How cool is that? So yes I certainly can relate to her very well! And so much of the stuff in here is quite accurate too. Exercise is the best way to protect the joints (and personally I find diet matters a ton too). And yes it certainly can make many things way harder. The joints are all wonky and they naturally hyper-extend so doing things - even just balancing - is way harder. But riding a dragon!!! I remember when I was much younger I used to read this other very popular fantasy series that included dragons and I used to try to imagine what it would be like to ride a dragon. Of course I never thought about the issues of staying ON said dragon... But since I ride horses these days I have a better idea of some of the issues. But wow this book is totally AMAZING! it totally captivated my attention. The first evening I started it I got 50% through. And I certainly would have powered through the second half yesterday but unfortunately I have packing to do as I am moving at the end of the month. If I could I would rate it 6 stars! The characters are just so real. And they go through character arcs too. They change. They face obstacles and have to find solutions. And there is certainly a bit of romance in here too. The story moved so smoothly. Never a dull moment at all. None. And I just loved the first person writing in here from Violet's viewpoint. But the story is about a young woman named Violet who has been forced by her very powerful mother to become a dragon rider. That is a warrior. But her body is weak and ill suited for it. So she was training to be a scribe (but all of that writing would be a huge strain on her too - in fact I cannot write very long at all by hand anymore without pain + numbness going down my arm and I get horrid shoulder pain) but that changed - she had to go be a dragon rider or die trying. But its not that easy in fact its very dangerous. Most people who try to become a rider end up dead. And you can be killed by your own classmates! Yes, its a very brutal school. And after all of these difficult obstacles - which Violet is ill suited to pass - she has to hope that a dragon will pick her. But what dragon will pick someone with a body that doesn't work right due to genetic mutations? And all of that is near the beginning of the book! For a huge mysterious and dangerous problem is brewing in the Kingdom! And poor Violet will run smack into it - err - fly into it. If she can stay on the dragon that is... You definitely should read this!
J**K
Para quem ama esse universo de romantasy, Fourth Wing é uma ótima escolha. Superficialmente, é como se a autora pegasse Jogos Vorazes, As Crônicas de Gelo e Fogo, Harry Potter, ACOTAR e batesse em um liquidificador para criar essa obra. Porém, ao nos aprofundarmos na história, esquecemos essa primeira impressão, pois é notável que a Rebecca Yaros sabe escrever uma trama envolvente, que transporta o leitor para aquele universo e consegue fazê-lo sentir o que a personagem sente. Inicialmente, sobre a trama: Violet Sorrengail é a clássica heroína que se difere dos outros porque nunca quis se encaixar naquele contexto em primeiro lugar. Em uma escola dividida em quatro esquadrões - escribas, infantaria, curandeiros e montadores de dragões -, ela queria se dedicar ao primeiro, mas é forçada a ir para o último. Daí pra frente, apenas existir lá dentro se torna uma luta pela sobrevivência, pois os montadores de dragões não aceitam alguém que enfraqueça essa unidade. Lá, ela conhece Xanden Riorson, o qual é um, também clássico, anti-herói que será o interesse amoroso - e muito, muito carnal - da personagem. Ele tem tudo que amamos em um mocinho de romantasy: é lindo, é forte, chama a Violet por um apelido especial, apoia a liberdade e a liderança dela com um jeito de malvado, de perigoso, de irônico... mas tem todos os motivos do mundo pra fazer o que faz, é justo, é leal, é irresistível...e, no final das contas, completamente devoto a ela. É a receita infalível para um enemies to lovers de devorar em uma madrugada. Jogue no meio o perigo constante, ameaças mortais, dragões amedrontadores, inimigos POR TODA PARTE, uma revolução no mundo em que a protagonista vive e no jeito que ela vê as coisas e temos Fourth Wing nos prendendo à leitura como maníacas obcecadas. Claro, o livro tem defeitos: existem muitos clichês - desde bad boys vs mocinho, a garota diferente das outras garotas, protagonista superidealizada (vulgo Mary Sue/a escolhida/se errou, foi com razão) em alguns momentos, mommy e daddy issues pra todo lado -, pelo menos 1 palavrão por página (o que, em minha opinião, deixa o livro adolescente demais), e se você é apaixonada pelo Rhysand de ACOTAR, você provavelmente vai notar umas certas... semelhanças entre ele e o Xaden. Em suma, o livro cumpre o seu papel: é uma leitura divertida, te mantém interessada o tempo inteiro, te faz torcer por alguns personagens e odiar outros, te faz passar mal com as cenas hot (muito bem escritas, por sinal!), e ir correndo pro próximo livro da série só pra não nem 1 minuto de distância daquele mundo e daquele casal. Eu não diria que é super revolucionário, pois acho que esse nicho literário (fantasia com romances épicos para jovens adultos) já não tem tanto pra onde correr mais. Dito isso, cá estou eu, já terminando o segundo livro e em agonia por ter que esperar o terceiro. Enfim, recomendo!
G**G
Real nice book, my jaw dropped to the floor with the last sentence.
T**S
Having heard raving reviews and whispers about 'Fourth Wing' for what felt like an eternity, I finally decided it was time to make it my next literary adventure. I have previously had no encounter with a Rebecca Yarros novel, though the prospect of diving into a book showered with overwhelming acclaim did give rise to a touch of apprehension. What if my expectations were too high? However, the persistent curiosity surrounding this book left me with no choice but to take the plunge. Luckily, fate smiled upon me. From the very outset, 'Fourth Wing' ensnared my attention, refusing to release its grip until the very last page. This novel is an irresistible escapade. Violet's journey commences abruptly as she finds herself thrust into the perilous Riders Quadrant, a stark departure from her envisioned sanctuary in the Scribe Quadrant amidst books. With a physical fragility that seemingly marks her for demise, she becomes an unlikely contender in a place where survival is a fierce battle. Undeterred, Violet channels her tenacity into relentless efforts to fortify herself. Gifted with intellect, she navigates the challenges, becoming adept at outsmarting those around her. In a cutthroat environment where trust is scarce, distinguishing allies from foes becomes a daunting task. Enter Xaden Riorson, the formidable wingleader in the Riders Quadrant, whose power and ruthlessness make him a force to be reckoned with. However, buried beneath his dominance lies a deep-seated vendetta fueled by the shadows of the past—Violet's mother having played a pivotal role in the demise of his father. 'Fourth Wing' effortlessly encapsulates everything I adore in a book—fantasy, romance, suspense, and unexpected twists. Returning to the realm of fantasy after a brief hiatus, I relished every facet of this narrative—the dragons, the magic, and the harsh yet captivating world that held me in its grasp. The story lingered in my thoughts throughout the day, a testament to its compelling characters and intricate plot. And the romance, an exquisite torment! It left me yearning for more, and the ending spurred me to hastily order the next instalment. 'Fourth Wing' effortlessly earns a place on my favourites list—a resounding five-star rating and the easiest decision of the year.
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