Immortal Fire
Books | Young Adult Fiction / Fantasy / Contemporary
4.7
(107)
Annette Marie
Once, Emi believed the heavenly gods were righteous and wise, while the earthly yokai spirits were bloodthirsty and evil. But with a traitorous deity poised to destroy her world, and the yokai standing as humanity's only defense, the lies of her upbringing have toppled to reveal a far more terrifying reality.Despite the looming threat, Emi can't escape her greatest distraction: Shiro, the fox yokai who has so deftly claimed her heart for his own. Soon--too soon--she will have to break the curse that binds his magic and memories. And once the ancient power inside him awakens, the yokai she loves will be changed forever.As the earthly gods gather to wage war against the heavens, Emi and Shiro must gamble everything to turn the tide against their immortal, all-powerful foes. Together, they will find a way to save her world--even if it means losing each other.Immortal Fire includes 10 full-page illustrations by award-winning artist Brittany Jackson.
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Author
Annette Marie
Pages
384
Publisher
Dark Owl Fantasy Incorporated
Published Date
2017-04-11
ISBN
1988153115 9781988153117
Community ReviewsSee all
"3.5 stars - This series got better and better with each book. This was my favorite by far. This book continues with the story of the kamigakari Emi and yōkai Shiro/Inari as well as all of the rest of the kami, yōkai, and gods that we’ve gotten to know throughout the series.<br/><br/>Something I really enjoyed about this series is that it wasn’t wholly predictable. I may have guessed that some of the happy endings would come about, but I couldn’t guess how. Complete predictability is something I often find in YA books like this one so that was really refreshing.<br/><br/>This series is very action-packed. There are tons of epic, magical fight scenes between gods and dragons and flying nine-tailed foxes. This was something that actually sort of lost my interest because it was so many very long fight scenes, but if you’re into that, you’ll love this series.<br/><br/>My favorite aspect of this book is that it’s almost entirely set in magical and mystical realms and/or with mystical beings. Something that annoys me to no end is when a fantasy book has all of these incredible other worldly or mythological creatures/beings/settings in the book, but the author focuses mostly on the humans. Like WHO CARES ABOUT HUMANS WHEN I CAN READ ABOUT DRAGONS AND TENGU AND KAMI AND MAGIC?!?! So that puts this book much higher on my list, we get so much time with the mythological world even though the main character is human.<br/><br/>My biggest complaint with this book is simply the possessiveness=deepest love trope that is so common in books, particularly books where the male character has more power than the female. He says ‘you’re mine’ with a possessive grin and she swoons. It makes me roll my eyes and I think it’s a gross way to write love and that took away from the otherwise pretty sweet and very intentionally consensual relationship between Emi and Shiro (minus the thousands of years age gap which is always a bit iffy too)."