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Book: “Red Tempest Brother” by H.M. Long
Publishing Info: Titan Books, July 2025
Where Did I Get this Book: NetGalley!
Where Can You Get this Book: WorldCat.org | Amazon | IndieBound
Book Description: In the wake of the events of Black Tide Son, Hart flees into pirate-infested waters to shelter on the island where former rogue James Demery and the Fleetbreaker, Anne Firth, now rule.
Reeling from their discoveries about the truths of the Mereish-Aeadine war, Mary and Sam hover on the precipice of a terrible, world-altering choice – they can stay silent and maintain their good names, or they can speak out, and risk igniting total war across the Winter Sea.
Meanwhile, Benedict captains The Red Tempest, a lawless ship of deserters and corrupted mages in search of an Usti spy with incendiary stolen documents. Benedict is determined to make the truth known, consequences be damned.
As rumours spread of a new Ghistwold sprouting in the Mereish South Isles, May and Sam sail once more into intrigue, espionage and an ocean on the brink of exploding into conflict. They must chart a course toward lasting, final peace, at the heart of the age-old battle for power upon the Winter Seas.
Previously Reviewed: “Dark Water Daughter” and “Black Tide Son”
Review: It was such a joy to pick up this book! Not only has this author never led me astray, but it’s always a relief to be able to close the last page of a trilogy and feel like the entire story came together just as it should. Such is the case here!
This book picks up right after the events of the second book, and of course Mary and Sam land themselves smack dab into trouble once again. The stakes of this book were just as high as ever, perhaps even higher as now our characters are not only grappling with their own futures, but the futures of Stormsingers and the Ghist as well.
Throughout the series to this point, there has been a strong focus on freedom (a perennial topic for pirate stories, it seems), and we’ve seen the ways that groups of people and beings have been harnessed and their powers used for others’ purposes. And from the start of this one, we see how fragile Mary’s own situation is, even with Sam and their crew behind her. I really enjoyed the way this book continued these stories, particularly the expansion of how the magical beings of this world are understood. Looking back at the trilogy as a whole, it feels like layers were carefully peeled back from one book to the next to finally land us on this conclusion where we finally get a more complete understanding and see how everything weaves together.
I also continued to love Mary and Sam’s story. As much of the journey of their romance had been completed in the first two books, this one was more focused on them working together to make a future for themselves where they can thrive. I loved the balance between the subplot of their continued love story (blessedly free of unnecessary drama or angst!) and the larger focus on the action-packed plot, with each of them getting strong arcs both separately and together.
This book also introduced chapters from Benedict’s perspective. I wasn’t quite sure how to feel about these at the start. Hong is an excellent character writer, and Benedict is an interesting character, but I also have a strong memory of his actions from the first two books, many of which were pretty close to unforgivable. But I think his arc was explored in a fantastic way, these things considered. He doesn’t do an about-face; instead, his story is given plenty of time to fully explore the slow evolution if his feelings and his realization of the choices and future that lies before him, depending on what he does now. He is the embodiment of a true morally grey leading character. You’ll definitely hate him at times, and even by the end, he is very much still a work-in-progress type of person.
I also really enjoyed the expansions we see in the world-building. The story takes us south, introducing new factions and locations, all vying for different things and often violently clashing with one another. Further, we get a host of new magical beings, most of which are horrifying to varying degrees, per the usual of this world, it seems. Again, the word that comes to mind is “balance.” This book manages to equally divide its attention and time between large-scale political/national conflicts, swashbuckling adventuring, and new fantasy creatures and elements. All while firmly holding true to the main trio of characters at the heart of the story.
This was a fantastic conclusion to a fantastic trilogy. It’s also criminally under the radar as far as I can tell, and all epic fantasy readers should immediately check it out!
Rating 9: A perfect landing on a fantastic trilogy; this is a must-read for all epic fantasy fans!
Reader’s Advisory:
“Red Tempest Brother” can be found on these Goodreads lists: Can’t Wait Sci-Fi/Fantasy of 2025 and End of Series in 2025.
