Blood Rose Rebellion
Blood Rose Rebellion book cover

Blood Rose Rebellion

Hardcover – March 28, 2017

Price
$17.86
Format
Hardcover
Pages
416
Publisher
Knopf Books for Young Readers
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1101935996
Dimensions
5.75 x 1.25 x 8.5 inches
Weight
1.15 pounds

Description

From School Library Journal Gr 8 Up—In 1847 London, Anna Arden's family belongs to the Luminates, the ruling class whose power is derived from magic. Only members of this society have access to magic, which is held in reserve in the Binding. Anna has a complicated relationship with magic; she finds it much easier to break spells than to create them. Because of this unfortunate development, she is banished to Hungary with her grandmother. Hungary is in the midst of civil unrest in response to the Luminates' monopoly on magic. A rebellion is beginning; the people want access to the magic as well as the same rights and privileges enjoyed by the nobility. With Anna's ability to break spells, she could undo the Binding. Realizing that her power can do some good, she becomes swept up in the spirit of the cause, finally feeling like she belongs. But is breaking the Binding the right thing to do? Gabour, a Romani man who can practice magic, supports the revolution, but he is against Anna breaking the Binding. Torn between two worlds, Anna must ultimately decide the best course of action, even if it means disappointing the ones she loves. The open ending invites readers to follow the story in this proposed trilogy's forthcoming volumes. VERDICT Despite its 400-page length, this is an enjoyable, fast-paced read with a likable protagonist with whom teens will identify. Recommended for most YA collections.—Lisa Wurch, Cuyahoga County Public Library, OH “Romance sizzles and deadly magic crackles in Rosalyn Eves’s electrifying debut.Prepare to be spellbound.”—JULIE BERRY, Printz honor-winning author of The Passion of Dolssa and All the Truth That’s in Me “Everything I love in a fantasy: history, noblemen, magic, romance, and a revolution. Blood Rose Rebellion had me charmed from the first page.”—VIRGINIA BOECKER, author of The Witch Hunter "A successful blend of fantasy, romance, history, and political commentary." — The Bulletin "Intrigue, action, and star-crossed romance abound." —School Library Journal Rosalyn Eves is a professor of English living in southern Utah and is involved in the YA community there and across the country. Blood Rose Rebellion is her debut novel. Find out more at rosalyneves.com and @RosalynEves. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. CHAPTER 1 London, April 1847 I did not set out to ruin my sister’s debut. Indeed, there were any number of things I deliberately did not do that day. I did not pray for rain as I knelt in the small chapel of our London town house that morning, the cold of the floor seeping into my bones. Instead, I listened to Mama’s petition for successful spells and sunshine. Peeking through my lashes at Catherine’s smug face, I yearned to ask for disquiet, disorder, and torrential downpours--calamitous words that might have eased, a little, the restless crawling in my heart. But I swallowed the words unsaid. Even should God heed such a treacherous prayer, my father would not. Though Papa’s weather magic would cost him a headache, my sister would dance under clear skies. I did not argue with Catherine when she banned me from the ballroom where she and Papa laid the final grounding for her illusions while Mama supervised the servants. “You’ll break my concentration and spoil my spells,” she said, though it had been years since I had spoiled anyone’s spell, accidentally or otherwise. But then I did not go to the schoolroom, where I was expected to improve my sketching while my brother, James, studied his Latin. Instead, I lingered (Mama would say loitered) in the lower hall, watching the servants scurry back and forth with their brooms and buckets and cleaning cloths, in feverish preparation for the ball. I did not rest, as Catherine did. Because of those omissions, I was in the hallway when Lord Frederick Markson Worthing came calling. I heard Freddy’s signature knock--two short, three long--and my heart leapt. Barton reached the door first and sent me a cross look down his long nose. He accepted a small white visiting card from Freddy, and I slipped into the open doorway. “Lord Markson Worthing!” I smiled up at him, remembering just in time to use his formal name. “Won’t you come in?” I didn’t have to look at Barton to know his brows were lowering. Our butler disapproved of forwardness in general and of me in particular. Freddy returned my smile, his gloved hands tightening around the bouquet of roses he carried. “Thank you, Miss Anna. Only for a moment. I don’t want to leave my horses standing too long in this wind.” In truth, Freddy had no need for horses. As a Luminate of the order Lucifera, he could compel the carriage with spells. But he preferred the aesthetic of his matched bays, which drew the eye and required less effort to maintain than magic. Barton led us upstairs to the Green Drawing Room, so named for the ivy pattern sprawling across the wall and the deep emerald drapes. “I will notify your mother, Miss Anna.” Freddy and I sat on matching high-backed chairs near the window. Freddy leaned toward me, nearly crushing the roses he held. He smelled of tobacco and cinnamon. “I hoped I might see you.” My face grew warm as I met Freddy’s intent gaze. I had first encountered Freddy only a few days after we arrived in town for Catherine’s season, to launch her into Luminate society. As the son of an old school friend of Papa’s, he had come to pay his respects. But though he had talked to Catherine, he had looked at me. Two days later, our paths crossed by accident in Hyde Park, and after that, by design. My maid, Ginny, might suspect the frequency with which Freddy appeared during our errands about London, but she was the only one who knew of our involvement. There was no one in the world I liked so well as Freddy. I admired the way his honey-colored hair curled a little above the collar of his coat. I adored his eyes, which were not really grey but a band of blue around a center of brown. And I loved him for the way the corners of his lips trembled when he was impassioned: when he spoke about his plans for a seat in the Luminate-led Parliament, or his dreams of a salon in London where Luminate could mingle freely with artists, poets, politicians, and scientists, where wit would trump magic, and ideals would matter more than money. There was little room in the real world for people like me, but there might be room in Freddy’s. We would be a good match, equals in passion and intelligence. I would bring the money his family lacked; he would provide the magic I lacked. “I have something I want to say to you. Will you be at the ball tonight?” “I am not yet out,” I reminded him. And Mama does not trust me around magic. “Then meet me. In the herb garden, at midnight.” The heat in my cheeks deepened. I rearranged my skirts, pretending a composure I did not feel. “Very well.” “Good girl.” Freddy stood then and adjusted his top hat. “I must go.” He thrust the flowers at me, roses of a red so deep their centers were almost black. The petals spilled over my fingers like blood. I watched him walk away, admiring the straight line of his back. In the doorway, Freddy spun around to face me. “The flowers are for Catherine. See that she gets them, will you?” “Anna?” Grandmama stood in the doorway, her fingers tight around her cane. “Has Lord Markson Worthing gone already?” I looked up from the flowers. “He couldn’t stay. His horses were waiting.” “And you were alone with him this entire time?” Her mouth was pursed, her Hungarian accent more pronounced. First Barton, now Grandmama. At least Grandmama’s disapproval stemmed from affection. My shoulders lifted a little. “He left these for Catherine.” I held out the roses and wondered if Grandmama would guess how much hid behind that small truth. Though it was customary to bring flowers to a debutante, I could not fathom what Freddy meant by asking me to meet him at midnight but leaving me with my sister’s roses. “Do not shrug. It is not ladylike.” Her dark eyes studied my face, guessing at my discontent. “And do not pine so for Luminate society, for the magic and the dancing. You are enough just as you are--and you are not yet seventeen, szívem. Your turn will come.” “Mama would hide me in the country if she could.” “Your mama loves you. She is afraid for you, is all.” I did not believe that. Mama was afraid of me, of my strange lack of magic and my caprices. My fingers found a missed thorn on one of the roses, and I snapped it off. Grandmama sighed. “Give me those flowers. I will take them to Catherine. You should go upstairs before your mama finds you.” I relinquished the roses, but their scent followed me down the hall like a promise. I sat on Catherine’s bed, hugging my knees to my chest. As children, we had often sat on Mama’s bed, watching Mama transform through the artifice of her maid from an ordinary mother into something resplendent and strange. I did not know if Catherine was thinking of our old habit when she summoned me or of flaunting her debutante status. Catherine’s maid attached a small coronet of pearls to my sister’s mahogany hair. Catherine surveyed her reflection in the ornate mirror, smiling at the effect. Her image seemed unfamiliar, her usual severity softened by the glass and the late-afternoon light. Behind her, I could see the smaller circle of my face, a pale smear of flesh with dark holes for eyes. I disliked mirrors. Sometimes when I looked at them aslant, I caught an uncanny doubled image, as if I were not one person but two--as if I were a stranger in my own skin. I never knew if such reflections were a by-product of my lack of magic or merely a defect in my vision. Catherine must have seen something in my look to distrust, because she whirled suddenly. “Anna, you will be good, won’t you? You know how much tonight means. I have worked so hard for this moment.” I did know. Catherine was almost frightening in her single-mindedness, and the only thing she wanted more than a dazzling marriage was a position in the Circle, the elite group of Luminate who governed all magic. If her debut spells were suitably impressive, she might be invited to apprentice with one of the Circle members, lifting her into the highest echelon of Luminate society. “What would I possibly do? I won’t be anywhere near you.” Except at midnight, in the gardens. “Strange things happen around you. You’re so very .u2008.u2008.” She paused, searching for the right word. “Quixotic? Unconventional? Immodest?” All those, and worse, had been hurled at me by exasperated governesses in the past. Her brows drew together, a faint tuck of disapproval. “You’ll never get a husband with that attitude.” “Perhaps I don’t want one.” My eyes dropped to the soul sign glimmering above Catherine’s collarbone: the illusion all full-blooded Luminates learned to craft upon entering society, evidence of their magic, just as their jewels witnessed their wealth, and their titles their lineage. Hers was a white rose with fire in its heart. I thought of the sign I would craft, if I could: a peregrine falcon, perhaps--fierce, swift, and strong. Catherine could not know how galling it was to live in our world as I did. Every noble-born came into their Luminate magic after their Confirmation at age eight--except me. Without magic, everything about me was suspect: my lineage, my quality, my education, my very self. I had no hope of belonging to Luminate society unless I could marry into power, but as Mama frequently pointed out, no one of any position would choose someone so flawed. I would have no fancy debut, as Catherine would, because it would serve no purpose. Yet my noble blood barred me from seeking an occupation among commoners unless I wished to cut myself off from my family. Until Freddy, I had not realized I might have a future. My sister ran her fingers along the rim of the cut glass vase now holding Freddy’s roses. “Lord Markson Worthing will be there. He has been so attentive lately.” She glanced at me from under her eyelashes, a demure trick I could never hope to master. “I know you like him, Anna. But you should understand he would never look at you. Not seriously. His father intends him to marry me.” My hands curled tightly on the coverlet of Catherine’s bed. What was it Freddy wished to tell me? That he loved me--or that he meant to court Catherine? I did not think I could bear it if he married her. She only cared for his name and his title and his family. She did not deserve him. At ten minutes to midnight, I set down my book of poetry and smoothed the sleek coils of dark hair around my ears. As a treat, James and I had been served some of the supper dishes in the schoolroom: lobster, dressed crab, rice croquettes, tongue sliced so thin it was almost transparent, pastries, cheeses, pulled bread, and iced pudding. James had eaten himself into a stupor and was now snoring on the rug, a book of fairy tales long forgotten beside him. I covered him with a quilt and crept down the stairs to my father’s library. I hesitated in the doorway, listening. Were I an Elementalist like Papa, capable of manipulating wind and light, I could set a spell on the air to tell me whether anyone lurked nearby. As it was, I had to rely on my own senses. Beneath the distant echo of voices and music, I heard only the quiet spit and crackle of fire in the grate, so I plunged into the room, crossed the carpet, and pushed my way out the large French doors into the garden. A gentle breeze caressed my cheek, part of the wind charm Papa used to keep the smoke and fog of London from our garden. I closed my eyes and took a deep breath, smelling green and growing things. After the threatening sky of the afternoon, the evening had come on clear. Papa did not often use his magic, but when he did, his handiwork was always finely wrought. I followed a little-used path toward Grandmama’s herb garden. I loved her garden, especially in summer when the air was sharp with mint and basil. Even in winter I loved it: the bare, orderly plots waiting for spring, the neat circular walkway around the center. The garden was empty when I arrived. The darkness of the night crept up my arms, settled under my heart. Freddy was not here. A gust of wind brought with it the scent of roses from the ballroom, and I shivered. Perhaps Freddy was having difficulty getting away or negotiating the garden in the darkness. Footsteps crunched on gravel behind me. My heart thumped, and I crouched down below the shadow of the hedge. I could not be seen. I was not supposed to be here. A man’s low voice sounded; it was not Freddy. “There’s fighting again in Manchester, bloody lower classes demanding access to magic. Why can’t they simply accept the order of things? If they were meant to have magic, they’d have been born Luminate. There’s no magic in common blood. Riots and petitions for magic will not change that.” A pause, then a second voice. “The commoners questioning is bad enough. But they say Arden is a heretic, wants to do away with the Binding.” “Madness. How can he not see that breaking the Binding will undo the very social order that supports us?” The hair at the nape of my neck lifted. Why should these men link Papa with the worker riots? He was no heretic. He believed in the sanctity of the Binding, the great spell that held all magic in a vast reservoir of power, accessible only to those with Luminate blood. “So I’ve heard. But his younger daughter’s Barren and his son’s nearly so. What more would you expect from such a family?” “The elder daughter is comely enough. I hope for her sake her blood runs truer than her sister’s.” My cheeks burned as the voices muted, moving out of range. I tried to push the conversation from my mind. I hated that people could speak so casually of my family, dismissing us--me--as so much gossip. A fresh wind plucked at my hair and sleeves, and I smelled tobacco and cinnamon. My heart lifted; Freddy had come. I straightened and turned to face him. I was tall for a girl, nearly of a height with Freddy. He took my hand, linking my cool, gloveless fingers with his gloved ones, and led me to a bench. “I’m sorry I was late. I was held up talking with Lady Dorchester.” Read more

Features & Highlights

  • "A magical tale unlike anything you've read before."
  • Bustle"[A] richly imagined 19th-century historical fantasy."
  • EW, A-The thrilling first book in a YA fantasy trilogy for fans of
  • Red Queen.
  • In a world where social prestige derives from a trifecta of blood, money, and magic, one girl has the ability to break the spell that holds the social order in place.
  • Sixteen-year-old Anna Arden is barred from society by a defect of blood. Though her family is part of the Luminate, powerful users of magic, she is Barren, unable to perform the simplest spells. Anna would do anything to belong. But her fate takes another course when, after inadvertently breaking her sister’s debutante spell—an important chance for a highborn young woman to show her prowess with magic—Anna finds herself exiled to her family’s once powerful but now crumbling native Hungary.   Her life might well be over.   In Hungary, Anna discovers that nothing is quite as it seems. Not the people around her, from her aloof cousin Noémi to the fierce and handsome Romani Gábor. Not the society she’s known all her life, for discontent with the Luminate is sweeping the land. And not her lack of magic. Isolated from the only world she cares about, Anna still can’t seem to stop herself from breaking spells.   As rebellion spreads across the region, Anna’s unique ability becomes the catalyst everyone is seeking. In the company of nobles, revolutionaries, and Romani, Anna must choose: deny her unique power and cling to the life she’s always wanted, or embrace her ability and change that world forever.
  • “A fast-paced historical fantasy full of magic, romance, and adventure!”—JESSICA DAY GEORGE,
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author of
  • Silver in the Blood

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(77)
★★★★
25%
(64)
★★★
15%
(39)
★★
7%
(18)
23%
(59)

Most Helpful Reviews

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super interesting and wholly unique premise.

Blood Rose Rebellion is the first book in the young adult fantasy series by the same name. It is also author Rosalyn Eves debut novel, which really impressed me. Blood Rose Rebellion was an excellent read for me, and I can't wait to journey back into this crazy world. I loved the fantasy elements a little more than the romance elements but I have a feeling book two will change my mind. I think this is a romance that is going to get better and better with each book, now that the foundation has been laid for the characters and the story.

Blood Rose Rebellion tells the story of young Anna. Anna is a member of a high class Luminate family. Luminate meaning they are the wielders of magic in this world. Only Anna is barren, she can't wield magic. But she does seem to mess up people's spells when she is around. I loved this premise. I found it to be a breath of fresh air from the norm of magic stories where the main character picks everything up just a bit too easily. Nothing really comes easy for Anna. I liked her a lot. But her breaking spells is really only the beginning of the story.

What I loved most about Blood Rose Rebellion is that this was a story that kept growing and growing. You will want to pay attention to the details of the world and its' structure early on because it gets more complicated the more we learn about magic and the binding spell and all that other interesting stuff. So be sure you read closely or you might find yourself confused at some points. The concept of a binding spell to restrict the use of magic for non-nobles was really interesting to me. Plus, the whole idea of rebellion is exciting and thrilling. It all worked really well. I loved the politics and the class structures and how they all played into the mysteries of magic in the world.

Bottom line: If you are a fan of fantasies that have tons of layers, politics, magic and secrets, with action and fighting thrown in, you will love the Blood Rose Rebellion series. I found the premise to be super interesting and wholly unique. I can't wait for the next book in the series.

*disclaimer- I received a copy of this book for free.
6 people found this helpful
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then move to the positive to end on a good note. First off

This was a difficult book for me. It had many positive aspects but many negative ones as well. I'm going to start with the negative, then move to the positive to end on a good note.

First off, the writing seemed all over the place to me. I really struggled to place myself in the story and the character's world and this was largely due to the writing style not matching the story. It is hard to explain but I do not think the writing was consistent with the depth of the story and the world if that makes sense. That being said, the writing quality did improve as the book went on and that was nice to see. On top of the lackluster writing, the plot was lacking the action typical of this genre that gets me into the book and hooked on the story. The plot was interesting sure, but I was not that invested in what was going to happen. And the way this book ended I have no idea how there are going to be two more books in this series. With a chapter or two more, this book could have tied everything up and been a fine standalone fantasy novel. The epilogue left a little bit open as to when the consequences of the end of the book are but not enough that I'm dying to read the next installment. One final thing I want to mention is something that conspired between two characters that really bothered me. We have multiple instances of distant cousins kissing, while this take place in the 1800s and that may be something that was more normal back then, it still left me uncomfortable every time it happened. These characters are most likely not endgame for Rosalyn Eves, but I still do not think it was necessary to the story.

As for the positive aspects of this book, the magic system is by far the best part of this book. We have this fascinating magic system that I really wish we had more backstory and information about. There definitely was not enough world building done to fully explain the magic system and how the binding worked and how things were before the Circle. But this idea of a magic reservoir that people dip into when they go to cast a spell is unique and I even enjoyed the little bit of information we got about the different castes within the magic system. There are a lot of different powers that I wish we had gotten to delve further into. Maybe that will happen in subsequent books but not sure based on how this one ended. I'm not sure I will continue with this series, I may pick up subsequent books but I have no need to do so as I do with other first books in series.

*Thanks to the publisher and NetGalley for a copy of this book!*
5 people found this helpful
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Fun fantasy in a unique setting

I loved this. It's a historical YA fantasy, set in a time and place that I don't think we see enough stories from. We see a ton about the Austro-Hungarian empire in Marie Antoinette's day, for obvious reasons, and we see a lot of it just prior to WWI, again for obvious reasons. But the intervening years seem like a black hole in my memory and this book was a delightful light shining on them. Lots of the events and the minor characters are actually real, but the fantastical story of a continent-wide conspiracy theory regarding the control of magic in the aristocracy is absolutely delightful.
4 people found this helpful
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Excellent historical fantasy!

It's hard to stand out in the YA fantasy genre, but I feel that Blood Rose Rebellion does just that. Rich history, fine attention to world building and vibrant characters bring this story of magic and revolution to life in a totally unique way. Those readers searching for fantasy with a little more heft than the norm will be drawn to this story's rich mythology and exotic locations. Those looking for old school adventure filled with magical battles with Victorian trappings will love this just as much as they love Anna, the magical girl with no magic who learns that she just might be the most powerful of them all. And don't worry, there's the barest hint of romance and the promise of more to come. This is a fast paced, captivating read and an enthusiastic recommend for young readers 14 and up.
4 people found this helpful
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A magical book

This is a book unlike any other. I was transported into a world of magic, spells and a fairy tale about a young girl who cannot cast spells, only breaks them. Sure, this may not sound like a fascinating book, but I was absolutely rivited from the first page. I loved it. I wanted to follow the story and find out what happens.

Absolutely enthralling!
4 people found this helpful
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Needs an Overhaul

I received this free digital ARC from the publisher via Netgalley in exchange for my honest review.

Get on with it!
This book started off at a slow pace and… simmered out from there. Honestly, the entire book just dragged on and on and on. The main plot kept getting delayed by this thing or another and was then diverted by other characters and their introductions. It was like a book of 90% filler and only 10% actual plot.

Clipped and Jarring
This is likely just a writing style, meaning this author may not be for me, but I absolutely detested the way in which this book was written. Each chapter had multiple scenes within them, but the chapters were still of average YA length. In other words, the 4+ scenes per chapter were short, clipped, and lacked continuity. The story felt disjointed, which made it difficult to fully immerse myself and actually connect with anything that was going on.

Childish Narrative
The main character of the story, Anna, is sixteen and seventeen during this story. She’s a teenager and likely to make stupid decisions. That I can accept. However, when her voice in the story sounds more like a twelve-year-old than a teenager, I grow frustrated. I wasn’t expecting to read middle grade and, yet, that’s what much of the story felt like.

Oh look! A cliche…
Ugh! I can’t understand how cliches are still found in YA literature given the numerous debates and frustrations readers have about them, but I guess they sell and I guess people still enjoy them. I, however, do not. And I did not enjoy them in this book. I’m really over the whole: one of a kind, saves the world, all men love her, but all women hate her cliche. Like… can’t we get a new cliche, at least? Something a tad more original?

Oh, how little I care
I tried. I really did try to like this story, but I didn’t. Part of that was because of my dislike for the overly selfish, childish, idiotic main character. Unfortunately, because I cared little for Anna, it was difficult to care about anyone else, especially when she seemed to face every other person in the story with disdain. Thus, I can’t name a single character I cared about in this story and it’s only be sheer perseverance that I made it all the way through.
3 people found this helpful
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Great book!

This is beautifully written and sucks the reader in from the very beginning. Part way through, however, the main character really frustrated me (She was making the wrong decision and she knew she was.) and I almost put it down. Don't put it down. Finish it. The author made it all work out in the end. Although the book starts out in England, it moves quickly to a much more unique setting--Hungary. If you like beautiful prose, strong characters, and a messy but satisfying ending (like real life), give it a go.
2 people found this helpful
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is a horrible choice in a boy to which she shares a ...

Blood Rose Rebellion is full of rich 19th century Hungarian culture. It's an imaginative historical fiction piece that depicts a story that most Young Adult readers aren't accustomed to reading. It blends truth with fiction by adding a complex magical society that is rife with prejudice, blinding patriotism, and a combustible need for a spark of revolution. It introduces us to characters who are multi-layered in their complexities. They are likeable, heroic, underhanded, and destructibly dangerous. While some of it's world building is a bit murky and confusing at the beginning, Blood Rose Rebellion undeniably captivates it's readers in a spell-binding story of a young girl who is meant to change everything in her world.

All Anna Arden wanted to do was fit into the Luminate society, the magical elite. She wanted to be able to wield magic and make her family proud of her luminate heritage. It all came crashing down when she's deemed barren, with not an ounce of magical ability. Her hope for a future in a society who shuns her status became very dim. What sets Anna on her journey deep into Hungary in the company of her Grandmother and away from England, the only home she's ever known, is a horrible choice in a boy to which she shares a kiss with, and a debacle of an event of ruining her sister's magical debut by breaking the spells she was trying to cast. Anna Arden may be deemed barren, but there is more to her nature than what people perceive of her.

In Hungary Anna meets a slew of new people, particularly a guy named Gábor, a Romani, she is thrust into a world of people who are fighting against the Circle, the top magical elite. It is here she finds that her ability to break spells and the growing revolution against Luminate society could be beneficial to all. Change is never easy and the change Anna is about to dish out could be more than what she bargains for.

Rosalyn Eves does a fantastic job in weaving her intricate and unique story and band of characters into a profound historical time in Hungary. She captures the spark of revolution against the growing dislike for the ruling Hapsburgs. She gives her characters purpose through the revolutionary spirit and propels her story forward to a very climactic ending.

Eves always keeps us guessing, never fully revealing the true depths of who Anna is, and what she is, until you get nearer to the end. It's this mystery that will resonate intrigue in readers and make them want to keep reading.

The only gripe that I had towards this book is the introduction to the mythical beings that are prominent in Hungarian folklore. At first it seemed like there was a lot going on, and this part of the story didn't seem to fit. However, as the book progresses, Eves does a phenomenal job with smoothing out it's kinks and makes this part of her story one of the strongest. I eventually become totally engrossed in these mythical creatures and I still want to know more.

Blood Rose Rebellion interweaves history and magic and tells a compelling story about a girl who thrusts her society into a new age. Rosalyn Eves has set the stage for an epic sequel, which is sure to include even more drama, danger, and civil unrest. Anna changes everything and now we must await the results of just how much things have changed. You won't want to miss this extraordinary debut.
2 people found this helpful
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Author can't write or plot; protagonist is unlikeable and uninteresting

There were so many problems with this book. The heroine is not likeable, not smart, not cunning, and not proactive enough to carry an entire book (or series). And the author is not a strong enough writer (or knowledgeable enough about story structure) to craft magical scenes. I was often confused by the action. There are subplots in this story that are woefully underdeveloped and feel tacked on. A savvy editor would have cut those. It looks like this is the first book in a series, but I could barely finish Book I. I just didn’t care enough about the protagonist and did not feel confident enough in the author’s ability to tell a good story.
1 people found this helpful
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Interesting world, but terrible protagonist makes the book intolerable

In a world where the elite and privileged are magic users, poor teenaged Anna Arden is left out in the cold. She never developed any magical powers, barring her from much of the rich society she grew up in. Few if any suitors will ask for her hand, leaving her future looking pretty desolate. When she effectively ruins her sister's coming out magic demonstration and party, all eyes are on her, including those of the council that effectively rules all of England. What will the future hold for Anna?

I did not finish this book, which is rare for me. It did have some interesting aspects, but once I hit page 50, I didn't see any need to go on. The world's magic system is interesting with only the rich and powerful even being allowed access to magic due to a spell called the Binding. There are four types of spellcasters: elementalists manipulate nonliving elements and light, coremancers read and influence thoughts and emotions, animanti influence living things perhaps talking to animals or healing, and lucifera shape forces such as gravity and electricity. My confusing is that animant seems to be to close to coremancers considering people being living, but I didn't read far enough the differentiate the two more.

My main problem with the novel is Anna and her love interest Frederick. First, Frederick is obviously stringing her along and kissing her in secret while courting her sister in a more public way. In addition, he's incredibly condescending, treating her like she's stupid. How is he attractive in the least? Anna seems to be fine with this, convinced that he will choose her eventually. The kisses are discovered when Anna lies about who got her into the party she ruined and the council views the events through magic. Of course Anna is pretty much ruined even more than not having any magic, but she only cares about losing Frederick. I just can't support a character who acts so stupid and puts her infatuation for a boy above concern for her own life and future. I don't recommend the book based on what I read.
1 people found this helpful