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Book: “Daughter of Crows” by Mark Lawrence
Publishing Info: Ace, March 2026
Where Did I Get this Book: ARC from the publisher!
Where Can You Get this Book: WorldCat.org | Amazon | IndieBound
Book Description: The Academy of Kindness exists to create agents of retribution, cast in the image of the Furies—known as the kindly ones—against whom even the gods hesitate to stand. Each year a hundred girls are sold to the Academy. Ten years later only three will emerge.
The Academy’s halls run with blood. The few that survive its decade-long nightmare have been forged on the sands of the Wound Garden. They have learned ancient secrets amid the necrotic fumes of the Bone Garden. They leave its gates as avatars of vengeance, bound to uphold the oldest of laws.
Only the most desperate would sell their child to the Kindnesses. But Rue … she sold herself. And now, a lifetime later, a long and bloody lifetime later, just as she has discovered peace, war has been brought to an old woman’s doorstep.
That was a mistake.
Review: Somehow I’ve never gotten around to reading a book by Mark Lawrence up to this point. He’s put out several duologies/trilogies that have sparked my interest (I think I even had a few loaded on my Kindle), but for whatever reason, I just never managed to pick one up. Well, THAT will be changing now!
Because I loved this book. Pretty much everything about it, from the fantastic characters, to the brutal world, to the dry wit, to the rising stakes as the book progressed. I’ll also note that it was a bit refreshing to read a fantasy book that didn’t feature a romance. My favorite genre, honestly by far, is probably fantasy romance. But lately I’ve felt so burned by what feels like the cannibalization of the genre by romantasy slop that I’ve gotten to the point that I see a romance introduced, and I’m immediately put on high alert. No one is sadder about this fact than me. But Lawrence was here to remind me of the absolute gems that can be found back in the good ole “basic” epic fantasy genre.
One of the notable features of this book is the format in which it is told. The book description kind of mildly hints at this, but throughout the book, the story alternates between two timelines: Rue’s current life, when she’s well beyond her prime but facing a rising challenge, and the past, where students fight for their lives in the brutal Academy of Kindnesses. This seems like a simple enough set up, one that is familiar in many ways. But Lawrence took all of my expectations for how this formula would play out and tossed them straight out the window.
It was one major twist after another, to the point that by the halfway mark, I was careful not to take anything for granted. It was destabilizing in the best of ways. The problem with a format like this is that the future section could spoil events from the past. That is in no way the case here! This book is only the first entry, and sure, I can see where Rue has ended up, but I probably have even more questions than I started out with in regard to her life up to this point.
The characters were also fantastic. Of course, Rue is the main character, and her current POV chapters were sharp, poignant, and heartbreaking at various points. No punches are pulled about the realities of age and its effects on the body, but this juxtaposition between Rue’s physical state and her unkillable spirit only served to heighten the tension playing out in this timeline. Her story ends on a definite cliffhanger, and, like I said, by the time we reached this final page, I was left with only burning questions about not only what happened in her past but where the story was going to go from here. There were a few late-game reveals that truly ratcheted this up; the next book can’t come fast enough.
As for the other timeline, it’s harder to go into many details without spoiling some truly epic and surprising moments. It’s been a long time since I was truly as shocked as I was by a few of these twists and turns. Even by the time I had a better idea of the type of book I was reading, there were still swerves in the road that I wasn’t expecting.
I will say, I think the Academy was a brilliant interpretation of a very tired trope: the deadly school/trials plotline. We can all name a half dozen books like this off the top of our head at this point, and one of the biggest challenges for this trope is the premise. The author has to come up with a believable world/system in which a school with a death rate like this would be in any way believable or viable. Well, Lawrence knocked it out of the park. At every turn, there he was with an explanation behind the philosophy of the school, the greater role it plays in society, and the how/why of the people who participate within it.
Further, once we begin to follow students through the day-to-day life of the Academy, he doesn’t overplay his hand with the brutality. Instead, it lingers in the background, building a simmering sort of tension that then explodes at the most unexpected times. Instead of non-stop violence and death, the story focuses on the lives of the girls going through this grueling life. It was immersive in the best way, where I easily became invested in even some of the side characters involved. And, of course, this building of emotional stakes only highlights the horror and terror of the school when it hones in on the more brutal moments.
Beyond this, the story’s greater geopolitical world, its religions, its society, were all incredibly well done. While the true heroes of the story are its characters, the world-building effectively set the stage for the more grand conflicts that we can see simmering in the future.
So, yes. I loved this book. If you enjoy epic fantasy, this is a must-read for sure. You also better believe that Lawrence’s back catalog has taken a massive leap up my TBR list!
Rating 10: Brutal and heartbreaking; a must-read for all epic and grimdark fantasy readers!
Reader’s Advisory:
“Daughter of Crows” can be found on these Goodreads lists: 2026 Adult Fantasy & Science Fiction and Most Anticipated Adult Fantasy & Sci-fi of 2026 (Standalones & New Series)















