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The Dragon Republic

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Member Reviews

This series has some of the most well constructed and well-written prose I have seen in the past 5 years. Anyone who's a fan of intricate and strong characters is doing themselves a disservice by not reading this book. I can't wait to read more from R.F Kuang, she is a very talented writer who I hope has a long writing career ahead of her. Can't wait for book 3!

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“The Dragon Republic” is the amazing follow up to The Poppy War. This book was so good. Like seriously, my review will not even begin to do it justice. I will get straight to the point. Plot? Amazing. Character Development? So good! World building? Do not get me started! I really enjoyed this book and cannot wait for the third installment to release. Be aware, however, that this book does deal with some heavy subject matter. Slavery, racism, abortion, are just a few. The pacing was just a touch slower this time around. Overall, I really liked it.

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The Dragon Republic picks up shortly after the first book, and is somehow heavier than the first in terms of where it takes you: through addiction, through war, and through the bitter hauntingness of regrets. Kuang delivered a wild, gutting ride with the first book, and left all of us wondering just how she could possibly top it in the second--and yet she does. With incredible gusto, just as much pain, and even more surprises.

The book opens with a traumatized, mentally exhausted Rin, who ends up joining forces with The Dragon Warlord--Nezha’s father. Lost in a game she doesn’t quite understand between people she doesn’t quite like, we follow Rin through the shattered remains of her mind and the process of picking up those jagged pieces to keep on fighting. The psychological warfare in the book is just as, if not more, believable as the physical violence and is perhaps what’s so compelling about Rin: despite every way in which she’s broken, she somehow manages to carry on. And not perfectly, as we’ve come to expect from our protagonists, but rather as a fragile, hurting thing, something painfully relatable for many of us struggling with mental illness.

Not only that, but the way the book exists exclusively in a gray area sets it apart from other fantasy reads. The more Rin learns about the war and what led up to it, the more you learn about the motivations behind every character, including the Empress. It’s easy to say “not everything is as it seems”, but Kuang truly takes the statement to another level, building up a conflict that’s interconnected in at least a dozen ways.

It’s the ending, however, that takes the book from ‘great’ to ‘incredible’ and sets up the finale for the series with a vigour that isn’t common in today’s fantasy novels. With characters we’ve come to love standing on both sides and betrayal fresh on our minds, Kuang has built an entire world out of blood and carnage and leaves us counting down the days to finding out if Rin will finally best all those who deserve it.

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RF Kuang is not messing around, this is a beautifully written, must-read story! Just stop what you are doing and go get the book, you will not regret it.

"Do not shirk from war, child. Do not flinch from suffering. When you hear screaming, run toward it."

Thanks Netgalley and Harper Voyager for the arc.

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Unfortunately, I thought this was the first book in the series but I was mistaken. I am really interested to read the first book, but until then I cannot properly review this book.

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R.F. Kuang is fast becoming one of my absolute favorite authors. While I loved the Poppy War a little more than the Dragon Republic, this book was just as epic, just as imaginative, and just as gut punching as the first novel. Rin has been through literal hell after the Poppy War; the loss of Altan is a blow that will not heal easily if ever. His ghost follows her throughout the book, hurting her and the reader.

There were so many unexpected twists in this book that I can't go into due to spoilers but by the end of the book I was screaming for the third (the Burning God). This is an author that isn't afraid to go dark, and I absolutely love that... and I'm terrified of it too. She has created characters that are complex, and you care what happens to them. This is a story that I don't imagine has a happy ending, and my heart is already hurting for the next book.

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This series is amazing! Brutal and well written it is sure to be a favorite of many. Kuang is a great new voice in fantasy.

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I definitely enjoyed this sequel. I really enjoyed The Poppy War, which I think I liked more than this one. I tend to lean towards the first books in a series though. This was a great read though. It picks up where the first one ended and continues on with a magic-filled, adventurous story. If you enjoy epic fantasy with strong, female characters, and a cool magic system, then pick up this series.

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The Dragon Republic is an amazing sequel to The Poppy War, which is one of my favorite books that I have ever read. The sequel was intense and engaging and kept me on the edge of my seat the entire time. R. F. Kuang is an incredible writer and is a master at keeping you turning the pages while simultaneously being unsure if you can continue in the best way possible. I would absolutely read any and everything from this author in the future!

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Shout out to NetGalley for an eARC of this book in exchange for a fair and unbiased review.

I’ll be honest, I didn’t like how the previous book in this series, The Poppy War ended. I felt like that book had a hard time swapping between it’s combat scenes and it’s normal scenes and as such the flow of the book itself suffered. This unfortunately feels like it’s repeated with The Dragon Republic.

All in all, I enjoyed the book, but the transitions between the various combat scenes combined with the occasionally curious pacing forced me to drop this title down lower than I would have thought before starting. The book is by and large a somewhat traditional (if slightly fantastical) military epic. People fighting for what they believe in to the point that it starts to destroy or damage the entire country, political intrigue, relatively common stuff. Suddenly however the book shifts deep into the full fantasy side of things with how Rin comes to terms with her powers and the gods that power them. By the end of the book I felt like I had read two separate books.

Despite this however, it’s a good book, a quality read for anyone a fan of the kind of fantasy or martial arts that this book spends much of it’s time focusing on. I believe R.F. Kuang has definitely improved with this book and I look forward to what comes later down the line. There’s still a huge potential here for a masterful closing of this story. We’ll just have to wait and see where the next book takes us.

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This book does not follow the middle book syndrome by any means. It can hold its own and it took me on new adventures that I didn't even know I wanted to go on. The characters are taken to a new level of depth and the arc for Rin is by and far not repetitive. I love the development of characters as a whole especially Rin. We see her as a little girl trying to prove herself in the first book and now we see her as someone grown trying to find and understand her place in the world.
This book does the same thing as the first one where it makes you want more and it leaves you wanting to learn more about the real Chinese history and finding out where the inspiration came from. We are introduced to a new group of people who are a natural addition to story (not necessarily for happy reasons).
I am most grateful for the tactfulness that R.F. Kuang demonstrates when she writes about the brutal and dark parts of war. Sure, there is camaraderie which she does wonderfully but most importantly she does not gloss over the horrors of war. Neither does she dwell on it and take away from the rest of the story. She found that nice balance that allows readers to face the injustices and walk away wanting to act rather than wallow. She creates an empowerment that is not easy to do in literature with such content.

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This is a sequel to The much loved The Poppy War and book two does not disappoint! Fans of her first book will be hooked from page one since it picks up right after book one ends. This book has a similar working style sans the YA writing displayed in the first half of the Poppy War.

Rin continues to discover her powers and the powers from above. There is death, war and everything in between but I enjoyed every moment of it. The ending left me with my mouth open just like fantasies should. High recommend.

Thankyou for the ARC in exchange for my honest review.

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Title: The Dragon Republic (The Poppy Wars #2)
Author: R.F. Khang
Pages: A thousand (560)
Genre: Fantasy, Politics (?), New Adult
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

This is an Advanced Readers Copy. That means that this is not the final version of the book. Therefore, facts and quotes are subject to change in the published book.

Release date: Out Now

This is the second book in the series. Please click here for the first book.

After everything that happened in the first, we now follow Rin and the Cike as they work toward their goal of killing the empress. But nothing will go as planned when old classmates begin to show up and Rin is dragged back into another war. This time, what side is she really on?

Oh No's

Rin is a selfish little prick she literally abandoned the Cike to the point where they're not even mention anymore but there literally in the same army as her like she literally just gives up on her friends and just move on without them because now she feels powerless but she replaces them for two other new people and I think that's disgusting

Word and caution thrown to the wind this book is just as long if not longer than the first book prepare. This book did not need to be so long nor was there a real reason to continue the series into a trilogy.

Yay's

If you have any interest in politics in the creation of politics within the world this is where you need to be although I really wish there was a map that would make this a lot more understandable perhaps there is a map but I do have the e-book version so I do not physically see a map but the politics that occur within this novel is severely thought out and it's a literally a war and it's crazy

The world building in this book is phenomenal. We see a lot of the previous characters come back and we are able to follow everyone and how they changed from the first book. Character development is definitely A+.

Finally,

Honestly even though I was bored to death I really loved the way that the characters were written. How they communicated with each other really kept the story alive for me. If you enjoyed the first I definitely recommending moving on to book two.

My similar recommendation for this novel would be Shadowscale (Book #2 of Seraphina) by-www.

Favorite Quote

"'What the fuck do I do with this?' Rin held up a loose rectangle of cloth.

'Calm down. It's a shawl, you drape it just under your shoulders.'"

-90%

│Goodreads│Twitter│Instagram│Previous Post│

-PM

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I received an eARC from Netgalley in exchange for a fair and honest review.

Content notes for the book: Bodily, emotional, and mental trauma; sexual assault; religious bullshit to justify bad shit; opioid addiction; extreme and graphic war-based violence; anything that was mentioned for book 1

I. CANNOT. WITH. THIS. BOOK. Please note this review will contain major spoilers for The Poppy War, which cannot be helped.

If I thought I loved book 1, I was not prepared for how much I love book 2. From a craft standpoint, it soars far beyond TPW; the prose is tighter, cleaner; the worldbuilding is fabulous and expansive; the connection to actual Chinese history much clearer. This book, people. THIS. BOOK.

While I usually prefer stand-alones even in a trilogy, book 2 is a masterful example of what a middle book can do. In terms of what actually happens, the answer is "not much" and "everything." I took so long to read this because of the semester but not because each page wasn't a page turner.

Characters: I learned *so much* about who Rin was as a human being in this book. I know people wave her around as an Azula-like figure but deep at her core, Rin both fundamentally wants to do the right thing and is ambitious, vengeful, and *human*. She grows SO MUCH in this book, and I would die for her.

And I would die for Nezha, who also shows incredible, remarkable growth, and SPOILER: I swear to God if I don't get my enemies to friends to enemies to lovers in book 3 I'm gonna SCREAM MY FREAKING HEAD OFF AND THROW SOMETHING, I SHIP THESE TWO SO FREAKING HARD THERE IS SO MUCH DAMN CHEMISTRY AND LOVE THERE.

And I would die for Kitay, SPOILER: and I'm a sucker for a good "now we are bonded FOREVER but no actually because magic" trope, and the fact that Rin says she loves him MAKES MY COLD HEART SWELL, BEST FRIENDS FOREVER, SDF:KLHSD:FDSJFHDSF

Man, all the characters are so good and interesting, and we learn so much about the reason the world is as it is.

Themes: So I actually was reading this book in detail to see how Rin's trauma develops and evolves (for my own writing/comprehensive exams) and oooh man, this is so interesting. Rin re-experiences trauma she's never experienced herself, re the Speerlies; she re-experiences her destruction of the island; she uses her addiction to cope, and when she's "no longer" addicted, there's a fascinating shift towards disability. I'm so interested in seeing where this goes.

Hmm, what else. Really, this whole book is a delight. I love the Cike, SPOILER: and their end is goddamn tragic. I love Rin and Nezha and Kitay, as stated before. I love the exploration of what it might mean to rule a country, and how. I love the complexities of war and each side. I love that Rin's past comes back in a very visceral way, SPOILER: and I mean literally, with her foster family appearing in the capital. It was an interesting "what she left behind" moment. I love that we basically get a pirate queen character. I love that I read a book that made me feel things on every page.

Not a coherent review? You're right. I have no coherence when it comes to this book. Please read it and see for yourself.

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After reading The Poppy War I really couldn't wait to read this book, but man I wasn't expecting this whole mess of a book. That's all I can call it. Do I still like it? Heck yes I did. First of all, that magic system in this world is nothing like we have ever seem and it keeps getting better, last book the magic blew my mind, but in this one? It was another level, we got to see a lot more of it and a lot more different magic for sure. I freaking love it.

And one of the other things that keeps bringing me back to this world is the war and fighting scenes. No, I don't like war in real life, 100% against it, wish it didn't exist!!! But in this book and world, man, the way they plan it and discuss it? And the whole thing happening, it keeps me in the edge of my seat, literally jumping. I for sure would not know who to even start writing something like that...so well written.

World building, that's another well written part in this book, every time the characters are moving from one place to another the descriptions are amazingly written, I always feel like I can image how everything is, even the broken down places and ruins. SO good.

Characters, I really think Kuang does an amazing job with her characters, so much so that I have fallen in love not with Rin but others. Is it bad that I felt like she was driving me crazy in this book, for most part she was only thinking of herself first than anyone else or anything else and what the heck, that drove me crazy. Where is the Rin from the first book, the one I fell in love with? I wanted that little girl that fought and fought to be on top and fight for everyone else. She was lost in this book and I sure hope she finds herself in the next one. And that she realizes there are others that cares about her and she needs to care for them too.

Alright, I'm not giving anything away, why? Because this is the second book of a fantasy series and you need to read the first book, first of all and second when it comes to fantasy you really can't ruin and book, you need to dive in and just discover it all yourself.

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This series is so good. Everything is great, from the magic system to the character development. The world is just getting more complex and intricate. I am very excited to see what the author will do with the next one.

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The Dragon Republic was one of my most anticipated 2019 releases, as the Poppy War was magnificent. Kuang builds strongly off the immense and lush world created within the Poppy War. I appreciated the new depths the Dragon Republic reached, and how it explored Rin's struggles with her dark power and addiction. The stakes were higher, and the consequences as well. I think The Dragon Republic did a great job expanding on the themes explored in the first book - the horrors of war, found family, and addiction. All in all, a great book!

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This is amazing book that you will want to devour as much as book one the poppy war. The author unspools tis novels plot slowly, and never passes up the chance to make it tenser. The action is furious, bloody, unrelenting but is delivered extremely well. The monsters in this novels are familiar as it contains some of the darkest parts of china history. The dragon republic should doubtless prove to be a sizzling success. I am dying for book 3 next year.

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I really enjoyed a great many things about this book. Characters were fleshed out and the plot was well spaced. Some of the secondary storylines could've used a bit more page space but all in all an enjoyable read!

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What can I say about this book that hasn't already been said? I'm absolutely living for every parallel to Titus Andronicus I can find because I'm That Shakespeare Freak who likes analysing the hell out of that play.

But I'm also living for the parallel between Rin and Nezha - the morality behind what we should do when gifted with immense power. Rin's been beaten bloody by hers, had the responsibility of entire civilizations on her shoulders because of hers, and has been told over and over that she doesn't have the luxury of being impartial.

Nezha, on the other hand, has been beaten down in a way that others can't see. He shoves his powers and pain into a bottle to hold into his chest until he dies. (Fuck yeah John Mulaney reference.) And not because he sees how powers like this affect Rin - because he does see it, sees the internal struggle that's going to haunt her until she dies - but because he doesn't want to lose the rest of himself into them. He doesn't want to just become another shaman, to be used as a pawn in someone else's war. He wants to fight, and do it on his own terms, knowing that by keeping himself weak in that aspect he can still retain his agency.

I'm excited to see where book 3 goes. Beyond excited, even.

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