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    Sara B. Larson’s Bright Burns the Night better than its predecessor

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    By Jessica on June 27, 2018 YA review, young adult
    Bright Burns the Night LarsonBRIGHT BURNS THE NIGHT (DARK BREAKS THE DAWN DUOLOGY), by Sara B. Larson, Scholastic Press, May 29, 2018, Hardcover, $17.99 (young adult)

    In 2017, Sara B. Larson’s Dark Breaks the Dawn, which was billed as a reimagining of Swan Lake, was released. In May, the second book of the duology, Bright Burns the Night hit bookshelves, and it might be better than its predecessor.

    In Dark Breaks the Dawn readers are introduced to Evelayn, princess of Eadrolan, the Light Kingdom. When Evelayn’s mother is killed, Evelayn not only inherits her mother’s crown, she also inherits the war against King Bain and the Dark Kingdom of Dorjhalon. Evelayn defeats Bain only to be tricked by his son, Lorcan who cuts out Evelayn’s conduit stone and forces her into her swan form.

    That was ten years ago.

    The hope then had been to create peace, to balance Dark and Light. Trapping Evelayn has had the opposite effect.

    Without that balance, winter has taken hold and the Draíolon of Éadrolan lose more power every day. Lorcan wants to change that. He wants a truce, but it’s one Evelayn can’t accept because she can’t/won’t Bind herself to Lorcan for life.

    What neither Lorcan or Evelayn understand but soon will, is there’s something else at play. There’s an Ancient power pushing and pulling behind the scenes, and that power will stop at nothing to get what it wants.

    Soon Lorcan and Evelayn have no choice but to work together.

    Bright Burns the Night is an excellent sequel, and in many ways, I enjoyed it more than its predecessor. I think that comes in part because I left the whole Swan Lake idea behind and just focused on the book Sara wrote. I do wish I had reread Dark Breaks the Dawn prior to Bright Burns the Night, but I was still able to remember key points fairly well.

    There’s more meat the Bright Burns the Night. Here Sara more fully explores her characters and builds upon the nuances she created earlier. The pacing is smooth and tension perfectly wound. I think this is one series I will reread numerous times.

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    Jessica
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    Jessica Harrison is the reviewer behind Cracking the Cover. She loves books and worked as the in-house book critic at a daily newspaper, writing reviews and interviewing authors for two years. When the company cut back, she lost her position covering books, but that doesn't mean she stopped reading. If anything, the whole experience made her more passionate about reading and giving people the tools to make informed decisions in their own book choices. She has been featured on NetGalley's Blogger Spotlight and is on Kindleprenuer's Ultimate List of the Best Book Review Blogs. Contact her at jessica(at)crackingthecover(dot)com and follow Cracking the Cover on Bluesky, Instagram,  Facebook and Twitter (X) @crackingthecovr. You can also read scaled down reviews on Jessica's Goodreads review page. Jessica is also a reviewer on Amazon.

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