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The Intrepid Three: Animus Rising

The Intrepid Three: Animus Rising by Brianna and Matthew Penfold is a young adult fantasy adventure that follows Dez, Arabella, and Walter as they continue their quest to restore three divided planes and confront the Switcher, a force of evil that feeds on fear, selfishness, and human failure. The story blends supernatural worldbuilding, moral allegory, and coming-of-age stakes as the three young heroes gather allies, face the darkness gathering in Animus, and learn that restoration is not just about fixing a broken world, but choosing courage, belief, and connection when everything feels ready to fall apart.

What stood out to me first was how earnestly the book leans into its genre. This is fantasy with a clear moral center. There are glowing beings, shadow armies, portals, chosen heroes, and a cosmic creator called Author, but underneath all of that is a pretty direct question: what do people do when fear makes goodness feel impossible? I appreciated that the Penfolds do not treat their young characters as decorative heroes. Dez, Arabella, and Walter are scared, unsure, and sometimes overwhelmed, which makes their bravery feel less like a superpower and more like a decision they have to keep making. That worked for me.

I enjoyed when the authors let the worlds reflect the characters’ inner lives. Euporia’s exhaustion, Immerxia’s dependence on virtual approval, Aurelia’s obsession with image, and Animus’s battle between light and dark all give the book a strong symbolic structure. Sometimes the message is very clear, maybe even a little too clear for readers who prefer more ambiguity, but I didn’t mind it much because the book seems fully aware of what it wants to be. It’s sincere. It’s big-hearted. It wants hope to feel active, not passive. I also liked the smaller human touches, especially the friendships, the awkward teenage affection, and the way allies begin to gather not because they are fearless, but because they’re tired of being alone.

As a fantasy adventure, Animus Rising will probably appeal most to readers who enjoy faith-inflected stories, chosen-one quests, and battles where the emotional stakes matter as much as the magical ones. I would recommend it to middle-grade and young-adult fantasy fans who like clear good-versus-evil conflict, layered worlds, and stories about courage, sacrifice, and restoration. Readers looking for gritty moral grayness may not find as much to hold onto here, but those who want an earnest, hopeful fantasy with a strong spiritual backbone will likely feel right at home.

Pages: 147 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0C2FMSS8N

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