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π™°πšœ πšœπš˜πš–πšŽπš˜πš—πšŽ πš πš‘πš˜ πš’πšœ πš‘πšŠπš•πš π™ΏπšžπšŽπš›πšπš˜ πšπš’πšŒπšŠπš—, 𝙸 𝚠𝚊𝚜 𝚜𝚘 πš‘πšŠπš™πš™πš’ 𝚝𝚘 𝚜𝚎𝚎 πšπš‘πšŠπš πšƒπš†π™± 𝚠𝚊𝚜 πš’πš—πšπš•πšžπšŽπš—πšŒπšŽπš πš‹πš’ πš‚πš™πšŠπš—πš’πšœπš‘ πšŒπšžπš•πšπšžπš›πšŽ. 𝙸 πšπš˜πš—β€™πš 𝚜𝚎𝚎 πš‹πš˜πš˜πš”πšœ πš•πš’πš”πšŽ πšπš‘πšŽπšœπšŽ πšŸπšŽπš›πš’ πš˜πšπšπšŽπš—, πšŽπšœπš™πšŽπšŒπš’πšŠπš•πš•πš’ πšπšŠπš—πšπšŠπšœπš’.

πš‰πšŠπš›πšŽπš•πšŠ πš‰πšŠπš•πšŸπš’πšπšŠπš›β€™πšœ πšπšŠπš–πš’πš•πš’ πšŠπš›πšŽ πšπš‘πšŽ πš–πš˜πšœπš πšπšŠπš–πš˜πšžπšœ πšπš›πšŠπšπš˜πš—πšŠπšπš˜πš›πšœ πš’πš— π™·πš’πšœπš™πšŠπš•πš’πšŠ, πšŠπš—πš πš˜πš—πšŽ 𝚍𝚊𝚒 πšπšžπš›πš’πš—πš 𝚊 πšπš’πšπš‘πš πšπš‘πšŽ πšπš›πšŠπšπš˜πš—πšœ πš πšŽπš›πšŽ πš–πš’πšœπšπšŽπš›πš’πš˜πšžπšœπš•πš’ πš•πšŽπš πš•πš˜πš˜πšœπšŽ πšŠπš—πš πš’πš—πš“πšžπš›πšŽπš πš–πšŠπš—πš’ πš™πšŽπš˜πš™πš•πšŽ πš’πš—πšŒπš•πšžπšπš’πš—πš πš‘πšŽπš› πšπšŠπšπš‘πšŽπš›. πšƒπš‘πšŽ πš‰πšŠπš•πšŸπš’πšπšŠπš›β€™πšœ πšŠπš›πšŽ πš‹πš•πšŠπš–πšŽπš πšπš˜πš› πšπš‘πšŽ πšŒπšŠπšπšŠπšœπšπš›πš˜πš™πš‘πšŽ πšŠπš—πš πš–πšŠπš’ πš•πš˜πšœπšŽ πšπš‘πšŽπš’πš› πšŠπš›πšŽπš—πšŠ, π™»πšŠ π™Άπš’πš›πšŠπš•πšπšŠ. π™½πš˜πš  πš‰πšŠπš›πšŽπš•πšŠ πš–πšžπšœπš πšπš’πš—πš πšπš‘πšŽ πšŒπšžπš•πš™πš›πš’πš, πš›πšŽπšœπšπš˜πš›πšŽ πš‘πšŽπš› πšπšŠπš–πš’πš•πš’ πš—πšŠπš–πšŽ, πšŠπš—πš πšπš’πšπšžπš›πšŽ 𝚘𝚞𝚝 𝚊 𝚠𝚊𝚒 𝚝𝚘 πš”πšŽπšŽπš™ πšπš‘πšŽ πšŠπš›πšŽπš—πšŠ πšπš›πš˜πš– πš‹πšŽπš’πš—πš πšπšŠπš”πšŽπš— πš‹πš’ πšπš‘πšŽ π™³πš›πšŠπšπš˜πš— π™Άπšžπš’πš•πš.

πšƒπš˜πšπšŽπšπš‘πšŽπš› πš†πšŽ π™±πšžπš›πš— 𝚠𝚊𝚜 𝚜𝚘 πš πš˜πš—πšπšŽπš›πšπšžπš•πš•πš’ πš πš›πš’πšπšπšŽπš— πšŠπš—πš πš‘πšŠπšœ πš‹πšŽπšŒπš˜πš–πšŽ πš˜πš—πšŽ 𝚘𝚏 πš–πš’ πš—πšŽπš  πšπšŠπšŸπš˜πš›πš’πšπšŽ πš‹πš˜πš˜πš”πšœ. 𝙸 πš˜πš—πš•πš’ πš πš’πšœπš‘ πšπš‘πšŠπš πš’πš 𝚠𝚊𝚜 𝚊 πšœπšŽπš›πš’πšŽπšœ, 𝚜𝚘 𝙸 πšŒπš˜πšžπš•πš 𝚜𝚝𝚊𝚒 πš’πš— π™·πš’πšœπš™πšŠπš•πš’πšŠ πš•πš˜πš—πšπšŽπš›. πšƒπš‘πšŽ πšŒπš‘πšŠπš›πšŠπšŒπšπšŽπš›πšœ πš πšŽπš›πšŽ πš πš›πš’πšπšπšŽπš— πš πš’πšπš‘ 𝚜𝚘 πš–πšžπšŒπš‘ πš™πšŽπš›πšœπš˜πš—πšŠπš•πš’πšπš’.

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Thank you to the publisher for sending this ARC to review via NetGalley. In turn, this is my honest review.

Character 4| Setting 5| Plot 4| Writing 4| Enjoyability 3.5

Overall Rating: 4.10

This story was enchanting in the nature of explaining how these traditions and families worked. Hispalian people are very much about family and Our main character Zarela loves her own family so much and would do anything for them.

The culture is rich and you can feel just how these people lived through Ibanez's writing.

The characters in Together We Burn are strong. They all have their own motivations and were realistic to their core. We didn't get a lot of time with the ones outside of La Giralda, but they still felt like they could stand on their own.

There are a couple of mysteries to be solved in this and I think Zarela is quick to anger, quick to judge, and is very irrational. She's heated. She's Stubborn. She's flawed and I think that's what makes her a good main character. If she was unflawed this would be a boring read.

I did really like this book, and plan on buying a physical copy once it releases. I did feel like the end went a little too fast, but overall it was a good read!

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I really liked the various elements throughout the story. I will say that I found the storyline to be very predictable and the villain easy go guess.

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I enjoy reading Isabel IbaΓ±ez books because they provide such a cool peek at the cultures she loves. They make me want to go to those places and experience the people, history and culture firsthand. I love that they celebrate cultures while also being fun reads with all the fun fantasy magic and in this case - dragons!

The dragonadore idea is fun! I liked that Together We Burn took the history of matadors and flamenco and gave them a fantasy twist.

I also found the characters and story to be enjoyable. While a few of the plot twists were predictable, there were a few things that surprised me or weren’t quite as they seemed. Overall I really enjoyed this book!

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This was disappointing for a book that could have been soo good and super interesting. The pace was entirely too slow for me and I just couldn't get hooked on. I skimmed the rest of the book to know what it was about though. It's such a unique concept for high fantasy and I kept trying to push myself to fully read it because of how much I wanted to enjoy it. The writing was repetitive and gave "trying too hard". Additionally, I just love dragons, and just reading about sooo many dying was breaking my heart.

Set in Hispalia we are thrown into the world of Dragonador's slaying dragons. Each show using starting with a traditional flamenco performance by our fmc Zarela. Chaos breaks loose on the 500th anniversary at La Giralda leaving her father, the dragonador, severely injured and unable to continue. Zarela must then take over the business herself.

This also has a romance plot but this was just from the parts I skimmed. When I skimmed the ending, it was incredibly lackluster and left me satisfied with not fully reading the book.

I wish I could have loved this.

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Thank you to Wednesday books and Netgalley for an eARC in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.

2.5/5

Ugh this was such a chore to read.

Together We Burn is a Spanish inspired high fantasy. The world of Hispalia has an ancient tradition of dragon fighting. Zarela Zalvidar is a talented flamenco dancer and the daughter of the most famous Dragonador. When catastrophe strikes during their 500th anniversary performance, her father is gravely injured and La Giralda is left in almost complete ruin. Zarela has no choice but to take over running La Giralda and face her fears of dragons in order to keep her family's business running.

This was hard for me to read because of the animal cruelty towards dragons. Plus Zarela has such an apathy towards them and it just really put me off this book. Plus then we also get a good heaping of sexism, misogyny and traditional gender roles and I'm just so tired of that shit showing up in fantasy. Can we not imagine a better world than that?

I didn't particularly care about Zarela or her romance. Though I did like Arturo, the love interest. He's super grumpy and he's against dragon fighting completely. I didn't really see the chemistry or appeal for him to like Zarela but whatever, I'm not stressing over it.

The ending was predictable but it annoyed me that the option did not occur to Zarela until like 80% into the book. Really? All this time to finally use some common sense?

Ultimately, I did not particularly like this, and I wouldn't really recommend it, but the cover is pretty.

Rep: All Spanish inspired cast, cishet female MC, cishet male side character with a permanent injury from dragon fighting.

CWs: Kidnapping, fire/fire injury, death, death of parent, murder, sexism, misogyny, grief, violence, blood, animal cruelty, animal death. Moderate: sexual content.

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I really liked a number of elements about this fantasy: it's setting in a fictional Spain or similar place, the use of Spanish (although repeating every phrase in English to make sure readers understood it got a little tiresome by the end), and the characters. But it was easy to call out who the villain was in the first several pages, and equally as easy to see how the practice of dragon fighting would turn into dancing with dragons. But for audiences less well-versed in the tropes of the genre, it should be a fun book.

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Together We Burn is an incredible story that sucks you in from the first page. There are dragons, drama, high stakes, enemies-to-lovers, and slow-burn romance. I love how Isabel is able to create lush settings/worlds and characters that are well-developed and lovable.

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I was lucky to receive an ARC through NetGalley in exchange for my honest review.

We follow the story of Zarela as she fights to essentially regain her family’s honor after a tragic β€œaccident” at her family’s dragon arena. She believes they were sabotaged and has to work with a cast of characters to figure out who is plotting against her family all while dealing with taking over the family business.

This is a fantasy story with a unique flair! The take in the dragon tamers as related to bull fighting is so interesting. The intertwining of the Spanish language was so beautiful and necessary. More books need to this especially when it is relevant. The spanish/latinx culture from which this story comes is truly stunning.

Despite the big plot β€œtwists”/revelations being predictable I thoroughly enjoyed it. The pacing was appropriate. The tension between Arturo & Zarela was lovely and the overall arc of their story was enjoyable and quite realistic.

If you love β€œenemies” to lovers, powerful, realistic and determined heroines, dragons and intrigue this is for you!

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Zarela is a flamenco dancer trying to follow in her mother's footsteps, but she's got big shoes to fill and can't quite seem to win the love the crowd like her mother did. Her father is not only a Dragonador but also the most famous one in Hispalia. When her father is seriously injured, Zarela takes his place as a Dragonador in an attempt to save her family home. With the help of dragon tamer, Arturo, Zarela begins training to become the next Dragonador.

First of all, I commend IbaΓ±ez for such a unique concept. I don't know whether this was her intention or not but this book struck me as an allegory for bull fighting in Spain. I loved Zarela. She was a well-written character. I wasn't sold on Arturo and the romance there fell flat for me. I was also not surprised by the twist, but I think that's just because the author did her job planting clues. Also, I wanted more dragons! The dragon scenes were some of the most interesting in the book.

Thank you to NetGalley and the publishers for this ARC. I recommend this book.

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I loved this really beautiful story crafted by Isabel Ibanez. I've read so much fantasy but nothing quite like this and I loved the story of strength and triumph in the face of some very scary opponents. I was hooked on the mystery of it all from the very beginning and the pacing was so good. As soon as I caught my breath, there was something new happening. Ibanez is just an absolute masterful storyteller and her scenery always makes you feel like you are right there along with the characters,

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Thank you NetGalley and St. Martin’s Press for an ARC! I was originally drawn to this book based off of the summary, the ideas of dragons and enemies-to-lovers made me so excited for this book. I really enjoyed reading this, the characters were extremely well written. The banter was cute and there wasn’t any insta love. It took me a bit to get into the story but after a while it got really good!

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I think this could have been a duology. I'd have liked to have learned much more about the different types of dragons, what Arturo learned and the changing relationship between Zarela and her family legacy. She was a decent enough lead character, and had endured a lot throughout the book, but she wasn't engaging of her own right (honestly I found Lola and even the ghost of Eulalia slightly more interesting). I guessed the villain about a quarter of the way through; but that intrigue was only secondary to the larger story. This is definitely younger YA and that age group should really enjoy it. I wanted something slightly more complex. 2.5 stars rounded to 3.

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Absolutely loved this book! Gripping storytelling with unpredictable plot twists in a truly unique fantasy setting. I'll promote it with Bay Area Young Adult Librarians and cannot wait to see it on our shelves at the library!

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3.5 stars

Zarela, the m.c., of this novel that for me reads more like New Adult than Young Adult, is in a challenging predicament. When her father no longer can, she is left with having to support the family and keep the family business (humans vs. dragons!) alive. She's sad and she's not trained, but she definitely has the will of any great heroine, and she puts it to good use.

I've really enjoyed Ibanez's previous novels (this is my third), and while this was a great listen (I opted for the audio book), the kind of description and adventure I'm used to from earlier installments just didn't come through as powerfully for me here. This felt a bit too predictable, and I found the romance tedious at times. Also, when there are animals involved, and readers have to pick a human or animal side, I'm just never going to be able to root for the human characters. Early in the book, this happened, and I think my perceptions about what kind of people some of these characters were just kept me feeling judgy throughout.

These minor gripes noted, I was entertained enough to listen to the whole book in less than a day and will continue to excitedly seek Ibanez's work. She creates lush and intriguing worlds, and this is no exception.

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Thank you NetGalley for the arc!

I thought the idea behind this novel was such a cool concept. Instead of Matadors, this world has Dragonadores. Instead of fighting bulls in the ring, they're fighting dragons. That's all I needed to hear to be super excited to read this book.

The book starts strong, throwing us right into the action, which I always appreciate in books. But from there, the pace kind of crawled for a bit. A lot of time was spent without the plot moving forward too much, but I didn't mind because it left room for world-building and I got to learn more about the world IbaΓ±ez created, Hispalia. I think that is one of the strong points of the novel. Not necessarily the world-building, but the atmosphere the world-building creates is something I really enjoyed.

On the other end of things, the last third or so of the book was, in my opinion, great. I loved the way all the plot points came together and resolved at the end. We have dragons, a mystery, and a romance all getting a satisfying conclusion. (I may have figured out the bad guy, and some plot points were a bit predictable, but I don't think that's a bad thing). Overall it was an ending I liked. The romance in the book was really fun, and the journey of finding her space Zarela goes on was a nice piece that tied the whole novel together.

My only complaint is that I thought there were pacing issues. The scenes I found uninteresting towards the beginning of the novel seemed to go on for too long. For example, Zarela has to sell a lot of things at the start of the book. We get the gist of that with a scene of her selling something, we don't need multiple scenes where she essentially does the same thing. On the flip side, there were scenes I felt ended too soon. A lot of action-heavy or romance-heavy scenes cut away from the action right when things were getting interesting. I would have loved for those moments to be more fleshed out. I wanted more action and danger, more romance and passion and time on the page to flesh out the emotions that come with that.

Overall, I thought this was a fun book with an amazing world. If you like dragons and spanish-inspired fantasy, you'll love this.

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Thank you to NetGalley for allowing me to receive an arc in exhcnsge for an honest review. All thoughts and opinions are my own!


This was a fun read - read it if you like:

A strong protagonist
Dragons
Fantasy
Spanish influence
Dragons

I’d just say - I wished there were more dragons. Can’t wait to see where the author goes next!

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DNF @ 22%.
I may pick this back up in the future, but it hasn’t grabbed my attention and I’m not invested in the characters or the plot.

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Thank you Netgalley, St Martin's Press, and Wednesday Books for allowing me to read and review this book! All thoughts and opinions are my own.

Together We Burn is set in a medieval Spain inspired world where dragons are hunted and caught to be placed in an arena to be killed for entertainment. Eighteen-year-old Zarela Zalvidar is a flamenco dancer and daughter of the famous Dragonador in Hispalia. People come for miles to see him fight in their arena, which will one day be hers. But disaster strikes and changes Zarela's life for the worse. A year before, her mother is killed during a freak accident with a dragon and a year later someone has betrayed her family and set loose multiple dragons to terrorize the crowd and ruin the Zalvidar reputation. Trying to fix what is currently broken, Zarela decides to become a Dragonador like her father and recruits the handsome Arturo DΓ­az de Montserrat to help her save her family legacy and find out who betrayed her family.

Together We Burn is one of my top ten most anticipated releases of 2022 and, though the cover is gorgeous, the story itself falls short. The first 30% or so was a bit rough to get through and I almost did not finish the book. Zarela is a good main character and I liked her stubborn yet determined nature. Arturo is also a decent character but he came across as a blend of other "book boyfriends" and the secret he was holding on to for so long should have been brought up a lot sooner. It felt like the secret was not as bad of a secret and the quickness of how Zarela forgave him was, well quick. Yes it was not his fault for what he was involved in but because of how quickly she forgave him, it would have made more sense for the secret to come out sooner than to drag it so far towards the end of the book.

The "villain" of the story came out of left field. We were consistently told who Zarela thought was the villain of the story and who she thought betrayed her family. Yes, he was a bad person and of course as the reader you're not going to like him anyway with how he was treating Zarela and her family but the true villain of the story had no fingers pointing towards them. At all. The person came out of nowhere and revealed why they did what they did and it almost felt unnecessary. As if the person was used more for "shock value". I do wish there were maybe a hint or two pointing in the direction of the true villain or maybe a little more paranoia or suspicion from Zarela (that it could be anyone and not just the person she had thought it was).

The romance and tension between Zarela and Arturo was okay and, looking back, I do like how their plot together progressed but because of Arturo's "big secret" it put a bit of a hinder on the overall romantic plot.

The magic system was useless. I'm normally not harsh about things but there was honestly no point to even having the wands or the magic when it was barely used by almost anyone. I did feel slightly uncomfortable about the dragon fighting. The inspiration of the dragon fighting is from bull-fighting traditions. I couldn't fully get behind Zarela's love of dragon fighting, or why she was so adamant to keep the tradition going, as I disagree with bull fighting in general.

I do love the amount of Spanish used in the book. I've seen some reviews complaining about the amount of Spanish written and being pulled out of the story due to not understanding the language. I can see where they are coming from but from my reading experience, the language being there really added to the setting, the culture, and characters. It was not hard for me to decipher what was being said especially with how other characters responded.

I kept going back and forth deciding on what star rating to use... I did skim quite a bit of this book and still understood what was going on. The pacing of the book picked up around 40 to 50% and I really liked the training sessions between Zarela and Arturo. The flamenco dancing, the tension, and the push and pull emotions between the two was written pretty hot. I adore Lola, Zarela's best friend and wish we had more moments with her and more development.

3.5 or 4 solid stars.

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This book had my absolute favorite trope! Enemies to lovers! I did wish it was more focused on the romantic relationship and not on the family ties.. And was evil drama part was pretty obvious.

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