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Dark Bringer
Posted by Literary Titan

Dark Bringer, by Kat Ross, is a gaslamp-flavored epic fantasy that braids together a murder mystery, political intrigue, and forbidden divinity. In a world ruled by distant gods and policed by arrogant angels, we follow three main threads: Cathrynne Rowan, a hard-headed cypher cop with illegal seer gifts; Gavriel Morningstar, the severe archangel who once condemned an angel for loving a witch; and Kal, a miner’s daughter on the run after a gem-smuggling disaster. Their paths tangle around the spectacularly grisly murder of a corrupt consul in the city of Kota Gelangi, smuggled ley-gems, and the re-emergence of the draconic Sinn and the eerie Plain of Contemplation that swallows exiled angels.
I really love the world the author has created here. Author Kat Ross gives us a secondary world that feels halfway between an industrial empire and a late-Victorian university town: angel towers sharing horizons with observatories, student bars, and gossip rags; cyphers kicking down doors while White Fox witch-inquisitors swoop in to steal the glory; miners whispering prayers to monsters they also fear. The terminology, ley, liminal spaces, forcing, Sinn, never felt like a glossary dump; it arrives in the middle of chases, interrogations, and messy street scenes. I loved the way magic is both sacred and bureaucratic: archangels filing paperwork while traveling through liminal ley, witches arguing jurisdiction, cyphers grumbling about forms as they bleed all over a White Fox’s expensive car upholstery.
On the character side, the book felt like a conversation between cynicism and care. Cathrynne is wonderfully prickly. She has a brutal sense of justice, a horror of confinement, and this buried terror that her seer visions will get her entombed in a kloster for life. Watching her collide with Gavriel, who starts as the epitome of cold angelic law and gradually reveals a bone-deep loneliness, was deeply satisfying. Their dynamic shifts from mutual irritation to wary respect to something that definitely is not regulation-approved, and the last chapters lean harder into that tension. Kal’s storyline gives the book its raw, working-class heartbeat: a girl who knows the mines, who carries a wise-cracking ghost and a ship tattoo under her concealer, pulled into the same conspiracy from the opposite end of the empire. Her chapters add grit and grief to what could otherwise have stayed a high-altitude political thriller.
I’d hand Dark Bringer to readers who like epic fantasy, gaslamp fantasy, fantasy mystery, and angel-and-witch fantasy with a strong streak of character drama. If you enjoy the divine politics and flawed immortals of N.K. Jemisin’s The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms, but wish the world came with more cops-and-robbers chases, haunted miners, and draconic horror, this scratches a very similar itch while feeling distinctly its own. For me, Dark Bringer is sharp, moody, and unexpectedly tender–murder mystery in a crumbling empire full of gods and ghosts.
Pages: 410 | ASIN : B0F4KWFMTL
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Dark Bringer, ebook, epic fantasy, fantasy, fiction, gaslamp fantasy, goodreads, indie author, Kat Ross, kindle, kobo, literature, Lord of Everell, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, romantic fantasy, series, story, writer, writing




