Defiant.
Over all, a good story.
Am I going to read it again? Maybe. I may be rereading Skyward, Starsight or the novellas and decide "I wanna see how it works fluidly together."
Before I go on about the stuff I did not like, I'll list what I did like.
I loved Hesho in this. Hesho is just amazing. I will always love him.
I loved all of the Taynix stuff. if there. They were amazing. Spensa the slug. I want plushies of skyward flight as giant slugs. That would just be amazing, please and thank you.
I adored the delvers parts in this. Especially at the end. (even if it was hindered a little by how Spensa's arc was handled there.) "THEY'RE HURTING THE LITTLE DELVERS!"
Jorgen is one of my faves, so any time he was on screen was something I liked.
Okay, I know, I know. But my favorite thing probably was Jorgen's and Spensa's relationship. I loved every bit of it. However, it did feel a little rushed, especially with where they left off in the other books. It needed a smidgeon more set up or a line saying that they'd started actually dating before. Or maybe I missed something last time I read Starsight.
Rig was awesome. Nuff said.
SKWARD FLIGHT! Oh, I loved them. I wish we had more of them. Ned was a highlight. The Shakespeare conversation was too.
Hoid's cameo was too! and- No, I'm joking lol.
One last thing: Luna was fun.
EDIT: GRAN GRAN WAS AMAZING. I'M SORRY, HOW DID I FORGET? GRAN GRAN IS THE BEST!!!
Now for the stuff I did not like (sneak attack, it starts with something I did like.)
I think the first half was brilliant, amazing, and I loved it so much. However. I feel like the last half did the safe option. It felt like what he was building to in the previous books, but it just... felt off. That was, in part, to the fact that, lately, Brandon has been removing the "Sanderlanche" from his novels. He's been pacing it out more. That is the one thing I absolutely despise about his latest books. The sanderlanche was his signature, they were amazing, I loved them so much. But now that he's been pacing them out, it feels way more specifically paced out when it could have been nicely put in together. This one had more of one than, say, the Lost Metal (which had other issues, but ya know.)
However, the previous thing extends into my next point. Spensa's arc. I feel like her arc at the beginning was phenomenal. It was working well, it was setting up some big realizations. The way the rest of her arc went was fine. It wasn't anything special imo. It was kinda like that last bit of leftovers from an amazing meal that wasn't what it was before, but it was still fairly good. What I mainly wanted was her to make more decisions. I wanted more of a resolution to what she'd done rather than giving her the tools to resolve it and half resolving it. It was like she was given a bunch of ingredients to make a pie and used half of them, making a good pie, but not the fantastic, universally loved pie it could've been. I think she needed something more that gave her more of the ability to say at the end "I'm not all the way better, but I'm getting better by each step." Basically, I want her to do
(Oathbringer spoilers)
She just needed something that wrapped her story up more than what she got. It also kinda felt like she wasn't given as much of the reasons she needed for what she did, despite having different reasons to do things she didn't do. It felt like the motivations and outcomes were mismatched, ig.
Another thing.
BRADE BEING THE MAIN VILLAIN. AHHHH. I'm not against Brade winding up as the main antagonist at the end, but the way it was handled just... What I wanted was Winzik to be more of a presence in the book. I would've liked it better if there was some sort of actual fight between Winzik and Brade. Then again, there would've needed to be more set up for that ending. Brandon outlined himself into a box here and couldn't really do anything else, is what it looks like to me. I wanted Winzik to do more things before trade took over. If Brade killed him after there was some set up and foreshadowing for that before, I would've liked that better, but there wasn't really. I think there should've been some of that in this book, more than we got at least. It would've felt rough, but it would've worked for me better than what we got in the end.
Oh, and I feel like I have to mention this. Idk if I'm just noticing it now, but the prose in this book was the worst Sanderson prose I've ever read. There was little to no description whatsoever. I get having it like a movie and not wanting to have like Robert Jordan or Patrick Rothfuss style prose, but that doesn't mean throw away the idea of description being included. I just wanted more of that.
Alright. I think that's all of it.
I have no idea where I put this in my rank of the skyward books. It's so much of a roller coaster of quality that I can never actually find a good place for it, I think. My rating for it, though, is... hmm..
7/10? That feels a bit high, but 6 feels wrong. Maybe 6.5/10? 6.7/10?
I would recommend this book. I'm looking forward to what Janci has in store for us in the sequels!