Cover Image: To Cage a God

To Cage a God

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Member Reviews

Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for this ARC.

I've read a lot of anti-imperialist, anti-colonialist, rebellion fantasies recently - it seems to be a current theme in YA/fantasy novels. I would say that this one was enjoyable but not quite up there with the best (e.g. The Final Strife). I liked Sera and Galina's relationship, and the concept of binding dragon gods inside people's bodies to give them powers is an original take. I also really liked the chronic illness rep given by Vasilisa's character - it's really good to see this coming through more in recent fantasy novels (see also Fourth Wing). I'm definitely intrigued enough to see where the series goes.

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This was an odd one for me. Initially I didn’t think I was going to like it, the first 20 percent had me bored. And then I got slowly drawn into the story and by the end was invested in the characters. It was an interesting concept, however I would have preferred a bit more world building. I think it will end up being a part of a series as the epilogue sets it up as one, however it has a satisfying ending point where I do not necessarily feel like I’ll need to rush to try the next one in the series,

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3.95 ⭐️
thank you netgalley and daphne press for a review copy!!
This was a really amazing fantasy book!! I thought the magic system was really unique and the characters were really well written. Its told through multiple povs which really helps with the flow of the novel but I did find it felt a bit rushed in the second half and I think it would have been better to split it into two books rather than one. Overall I really enjoyed it and would definitely recommend it to fantasy lovers!!

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I was excited about this book, but when I finished it I felt something was missing.

The magic system was intriguing and quite unique. I loved the concept of gods/dragons trapped in human bodies, which was unique, and how a person's status and power were based on the strengths and abilities of the summoned god. But I wanted more out of it. The gods were supposed to have individual personalities and traits (Sera and Galina could feel them moving under their skin, sensed their reactions, and had to negotiate with them to gain their godpowers), but these aspects were rushed through and never explored. I would have liked to see the dragons play a more relevant role in the story.

I loved the close bond between the two sisters, Sara and Galina, Vitaly's deranged personality and Vasilisa's resiliency. And while I love multiple POVs (here we got 5 POVs), it felt like there were too many at times because we didn't get the chance to really get to know any of the characters in depth.
The main antagonist, the Empress, was likewise too one-dimensional for my liking, a power-hungry and constantly resentful character who fell flat overall.
While fun, the romantic relationships between the characters (M/F and F/F) suffered from the same flaw: they felt a little underdeveloped, rushed and needed more attention.

I struggled with the world-building. I generally enjoy complex world-building, but here I found it very confusing. It felt diluted and heavy at the same time. The author dropped the reader into this Russian-inspired world with no further explanation, no map and no translations of the terms and language used (there is a glossary at the end of the book, but at least some translation embedded in the prose would have helped, at least at the beginning). This, combined with the sluggish pacing of the first half, made me feel disconnected from the book.

Overall, while I enjoyed certain aspects of the book, it didn't live up to my expectations.

2.75 stars

Thanks to Netgalley and Daphne Press for a copy of the ebook. This review is left voluntarily.

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Absolutely ADORED this pacy, eventful, romantasy!!

Firstly, the concept of caged Gods really intrigued me but it has to be said I'd have happily gone with 'caged dragon's instead and didn't quite get the link BUT...

Overall I loved the two opposing couples. The tension and secrets withheld between the ex-lovers was *chef's kiss.* I loved the Enemies to Lovers of the princess and the rebel.

The rebellion against the villainous queen was high stakes and kept me hooked.

There was only one character (no spoilers) that I felt really didn't get justice and I was angry that they weren't the one to get revenge in the final chapters. I found some scenes with this particular character very upsetting and it'd have been okay if they got their revenge eventually.

This was an enjoyable read and I thank Netgalley and the publisher for letting me read this ARC!

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While the allure of Anastasia x Shadow and Bone vibes paired with dragons initially drew me in, the first quarter of the book proved to be a challenging journey, with an extended period needed for me to truly immerse myself. The extensive world-building, though a staple, felt overly prolonged and occasionally perplexing, leaving me somewhat disconnected. Despite the inclusion of a language key at the end – usually a plus for me – some in-story translations would have bridged the gap.

Upon finally finding my footing around the 40% mark, the book revealed its charms – high fantasy, a distinctive magic system, sibling dynamics, dragons, romance, and unpredictable escapades. The poignant sisterhood between Sera and Galina resonated, yet I yearned for more glimpses into their shared lives.

While the romantic relationships (M/F and F/F) added flair, they occasionally lacked depth, and the numerous POVs, although intriguing, at times felt overwhelming without proper character introductions. A more thorough exploration of the concept of caging gods (dragons) within human bodies and the unique magic system would have elevated the narrative. Despite these critiques, I found enjoyment in the read and look forward to unraveling the story further in the next installment.

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I cannot tell you how disappointed I am about this one. I'm just so bored and apathetic to everything happening that I've had to DNF at 35%.

I was so excited for this as well! I've read and loved books from this author before. Her Flaconer series is A++. So colour me shocked when this was just doing nothing for me at all.

We seem to have joined the story after some of the most interesting-sounding events so we're just being "told" about all of those whereas in the present barely anything is happening and what is happening I don't care about because I don't know the characters yet.

There's a past love interest on the scene. Second-chance romance is my least favourite so even if this eventually gets going I doubt I'd be invested.

This book somehow feels rushed and slow at the same time. Rushed because of the worldbuilding we're being told, and slow because in the present nothing is happening.

I did initially soft DNF at 25%, went and read another book, then pushed through another 10% and I just think I should care by now if I'm ever going to and I don't.

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2.75 Stars

okay first of all let me say that i enjoyed this book more than i thought I would. After I was given an ARC I actually heard of quite a few people who didn't really enjoy this, which made me kinda hesitant.
So let me tell you who I think this video is for and who it is not for.

I think this is for very character focused readers, who don't need much else. And with character focused I almost more so mean relationship focused. Because those I did actually enjoy as much as I ever enjoy romance. Which is to say for me romance is something that I enjoy if it's there additionally to all the other stuff I love. More so than the romances tho in the relationships I did really love all the very strong female friendships and sisterhoods this books centered around.

So for whom is this book not? pretty much exactly for the type of reader I am. One of my favorite things in fantasy is the worldbuilding. But not the magic, but society, politics, etc. And there was nothing there in this book. We know there was a rebellion... but aren't really told what their goal was aside from "topple the monarchy". We're shown the empress we wanna kill is exceedingly sadistic and cruel, but what that means for this empires people as a whole and getting a feel of that? Not really much there! There'S a threat of war from other countries, but why and how the history is between those countries? nada.

All that to say if you care about anything past the characters in books, maybe skip this one.

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I had high hopes for this one, and though I enjoyed element of To Cage A God, I finished this book with the overall impression that I’d been wanting more for most of it.

Magic/Gods

Let’s speak of the elements I DID like, first. I thought that the magic system was intriguing and was actually one of the main reasons I was interested in this book!

The idea of gods - and DRAGONS, at that! - being magically caged inside human bodies was something I’d not come across in a while. But, I wanted more from this. A pretty consistent and recurring feeling throughout this was that I wanted a LOT more sentience from the gods. These are full-bodies deities, assuredly which are canonically described as having individual personalities and traits; so where were they?

Galina and Sera are foster sisters, both of which have deities trapped in their bodies, which are the sources of their godpowers. Given that this seems to be a fairly strong connection between gods and their human cages, you’d have thought that there would be a more consistent presence of said god throughout the narrative. I don’t know about you, but if I had a god underneath my skin who I felt “raking its talons” in my bones, this would be a pretty consistent feature in my internal narrative. But other than showing up to convey lust or provide power for something very specific then disappear, these gods were not present. There were times when I forgot that they were even part of the story.

I did find the idea of the experiments wrought on the main girls, Galina and Sera, highly disturbing, and understood the magic structure/where the gods came from, so that’s something! But I wanted more from this magic system, a) because I love dragons and b) I feel like if you’re going to use literal gods as a source of power, then it should be built to the fullest extent it can be. Not feel like an “instant solution” to any problems/obstacles the characters had been written into…

Characters

Now, another element I liked so this isn’t a massive-gripe fest. I think Galina and Vasilisa are my favourite characters in this. Coincidentally, they’re also my favourite character relationship. I thought this was the most believable relationship, and although (as a slow burn lover) it was a little too “instalove” for me, and dominated initially with lust, I thought that they made sense and I loved their vulnerability with each other, grown over time. Vasilisa was pretty much my favourite character, and I admired her strength, her resilience, but also her weaknesses. I adored the scenes with Galina and Vasilisa and wanted more of them! It was the main reason I enjoyed the book if I’m being honest, and my feedback mid-read was, verbatim, “I wish this was just about them.” Yay for sapphics!!

And back to griping. Another main issue I had with this is that the emotional connection between the main POV, Sera, and Vitaly didn’t exist until about 350 pages in. Three hundred and fifty pages, until I semi believed that these two were good together. And during that time these characters read as YA ‘protagonists’, rather than apparently 30 year old adults navigating and leading a dangerous rebellion against an empirical force. There was also a supposed emotional/backstory reveal between Sera and Vitaly, which felt very disingenuous. It seemed like this revelation ness supposed to make readers fall over themselves for this “don’t touch my things/that’s my wife” sort of relationship that booktok loves, but it doesn’t have the emotional depth to make this seem anything other than a plot device.

I enjoyed Vitaly more as a character, as I found him to be more genuine and believable in his characteristics as morally skewed. In his own words, he says he’s not about to convince anyone he’s a good person, and that reads true in his narrative. I did get bored with how often he would only refer to his love for Sera related through the lens of her ‘fuckability’, but, I still found him more genuine as a character. I still didn’t really believe their relationship, even with the background information. However I struggled with Sera; she was at times the ‘snarky heroine’, then the ‘selfless sister’ then the ‘badass rebel’ and none of those roles seemed to stick. I didn’t get much depth from her, and the only thing I really still know is that she’s down bad for her estranged ex.

I thought that Katya had more complexity to her than Sera, which although great, is also tricky because Katya is supposed to be a side character…

I also found the main antagonist, the Empress, to be one-toned throughout. She was the flat, monotone power hungry and constantly angry Empress, seeking power only. It’s been done before, I didn’t find it to offer anything more than the necessary conflict that a political fantasy needs.

Worldbuilding/Pacing

The worldbuilding was so-so. It felt like a watered down version of other Russian-inspired fantasy worlds, where political connects were somewhat contextualised but I still didn’t really get an idea of the good or tense relationships between countries/regimes. The inspiration for the world feels surface level, with no real understanding of what goes on here apart from the things that our main characters are directly involved with. Readers who enjoy a complex and richly built fantasy world with historical elements will need to look somewhere else, I’m afraid.

The difference between okay and great worldbuilding, I think, is an idea of how the world works when our characters aren’t in it. I didn’t get that with To Cage A God.

The pacing was also a tricky one to pin down, in that it felt like it fluctuated wildly. We’d get intricate details in particular scenes, and then - faint spoiler - we’d see Galina writhing in pain as a result of her godpowers, but then was apparently just left in the bath when another side character Katya ran off for help, despite the water making it worse. A very small example, and perhaps not the best, but there were instances where attention was paid in great detail to things that didn’t seem to matter, and then what I would personally consider more important things to be left out, or rushed, or skipped altogether. The fight scenes were quick and rushed - mainly skipped in favour of Sera and Vitaly to just fall into bed eventually - and the pacing just seemed to lag and jolt. I felt like a lot of build up then quick resolutions.


Overall, I felt To Cage A God had a lot of promise, and perhaps we’ll get more of this developed in book two, but I just don’t know whether I should have to wait for over 300 pages for things to start to ring true, whether that’s character relationships or otherwise. For Galina and Vasilisa, I’m tempted to pick up the sequel, but I’m also discouraged by the other character and writing factors aforementioned. But I’m sure that many readers will enjoy it for its romantasy elements!

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Con las lecturas del año pasado me di cuenta de que una parte nada desdeñable de lo leído pertenece al género romantasy, algo que me sorprendió pero que luego, con más reposo, vi que tenía mucho sentido. En la fantasía actual hay mucha tendencia a incluir tramas amorosas, a usar el enemies to lovers y en general, a dar más importancia a las relaciones interpersonales. To Cage a God es un buen ejemplo de esto.


Elizabeth May le da un barniz imperial ruso a su fantasía asemejando su mundo a los últimos años de los zares de Rusia. Es por lo tanto algo previsible parte del desarrollo de la historia, aunque la parte mágica sí que es más original. El poder que ostentan las clases más altas deviene de su relación con los dioses que habitan sus cuerpos, encarcelados de forma hereditaria. Resulta también interesante el paralelismo con la hemofilia de las familias reales de la época, que se refleja también en este mundo fantástico. Somos testigos de la magia y de la crueldad de la emperatriz en el primer capítulo, cuando asistimos a la destrucción de un pueblo entero en un ataque de ira.

Por otra parte, los rebeldes también han llevado a cabo sus experimentos mágicos y han conseguido que dos personas tengan un dios en su interior y puedan ejercer la magia, sin haberlo heredado genéticamente. To Cage a God nos irá mostrando la lucha de poder entre ambos estamentos.

Lo que parece ser muy interesante al principio, pronto se desinfla. Los personajes aparecen muy acartonados, y las relaciones entre ellos son previsibles en exceso. La trama está muy centrada en el palacio y la infiltración que llevan a cabo los rebeldes es, cuando menos, peregrina. Me temo que hay una acumulación de clichés importante y aunque reconozco que pueden resultar de interés las tramas amorosas, a mí me han dejado bastante fría. Tampoco es que se pueda destacar mucho la prosa de la autora. Es un libro perfectamente prescindible.

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⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
🌶️🌶️🌶️
🐉🔥❄️🗡️👩‍🦽

To cage a god is divine. To be divine is to rule. To rule is to destroy.

To Cage a God is an epic romantasy inspired by Imperial Russia and its revolution. That being said, you should go in knowing that revolutions aren't pretty, and be sure to check out content warnings. That aside, this book is epic.
When they say it's a book crossed with Forth Wing, Shadow and Bones, and From Blood to Ash, it's not a joke.

To Cage a God follows multiple points of view, but our main two characters have to be sisters, Sera and Galina. A sister bond like no other, they devise a plan to overthrow the tyrant leader, Impress Isidora. Using their powers due to being bonded with dragons (well, more like forced to use their bodies as cages), the sisters and a team of "faithless" try to take down those called alurea who use their power to murder, hurt and rule out of fear.

There are action, knives, fire and frost power, spice, sapphic and m/f love, dragons with attitude, dragons who feel, princesses who fight despite being in chronic pain, servants who hope despite being beaten, and magical flowers with different ways to help heal.

Highly recommend it to those who love good stuff the government type books, and those who love dragons, and a great worldbuilding in fantasy.

Thanks to Netgalley, Daw and Daphne Press for a copy of the ebook. This review is left voluntarily.

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Theoretically, I should have loved this book. It’s got Anastasia x Shadow and Bone vibes with dragons thrown in – Sign. Me. Up. However, the first 25% of the book was a challenging slog, and it took me way too long to settle into it. While I don’t mind heavy world building, this felt over long and occasionally confusing. Being dropped into a world with little explanation on the terms and language used, combined with stilted pacing, made me feel disconnected from the book. There IS a language key at the end of the book - this again, is something that I normally love - but some translations within the story would have helped.

Once I did settle into the book (around the 40% mark), I started to enjoy myself. It had all the nice little components I love, like high fantasy, unique magic systems, sibling dynamics, dragons, romance, and unhinged shenanigans. The sisterhood between Sera and Galina was beautiful and my heart ached for them throughout the book. I wish we had a few more glimpses of their lives together.

The romantic relationships in this book (M/F and F/F) while fun, felt a little shallow at times and could have used a bit more fleshing out. I love multiple POVs but it felt like there was too many at times – almost like we were given a POV without a proper introduction to that character.

Could the concept of caging the gods (dragons) into human bodies and the unique magic system have been better explored? Yes. Could we have done with maybe ONE less POV? Also, yes. Still, I did enjoy myself reading this, and I’d like to see how everything unfolds in the next book.

Thank you to NetGalley and Daphne Press for this eARC in exchange for an honest review.

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We follow foster sisters, Sera and Galina, whose foster mother experimented on them by implanting gods. The mother was executed for being part of the Rebellion, the Faithless. But the girls have their own path mapped for revenge for the Empress.

When they arrive at the palace we then meet Katya, Vitaly and Princes Vasilisa who are also important players in the story.

If you like books with devious plans, fighting for a cause, morally grey characters, power mad nobles and sisterly bonds, then this book is for you.

I loved the romances, second chance (sort of) and sapphic.

As usual I fell for the assasin, he stole my interest and my heart, Vitaly, his devotion for Sera made my day!

Another character who had my full interest was Vasilisa. First of all she was mysterious and full of secrets and then she blossomed into herself, her character growth was immense.

The second half of the book is where it piqued my interest, the first half fell a bit flat for me, it was painfully slow but at the same time important things weren't explained I felt.

Even though this is billed as adult I'd say it was more YA with a bit of steam thrown in!

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Mostly I was drawn to read this book by this author. I have known about Elizabeth May for a while but have not read many of her books. I read the Seven Devils duology she co-wrote with someone else and one under her Kendrick penname. But I wanted to read something else too. To Cage a God didn't quite live up to the expectation.

To Cage a God is set in a Russian inspired world. The two sisters, Galina and Sera, have been in hiding with the gods that inhabit their bodies. But when the emperor is assasinated by the rebellion they were once apart of, it makes them step out of the shadows with a plan of their own to overthrow the empire.
For the most part the book was entertaining to read. It took me a little but I did start warming up to both Galina and Sera. Especially Galina started rough with us. We meet her when she is nursing a hangover from one of her alcohol binges. But when Sera comes to her with a new plan, you see her starting to stand up again, even if she initially fights it. You see a very damaged young lady who is actually pretty strong on the inside. I also really appreciated the relationship that Galina and Sera had. They are not biological sisters. Both were adopted by their mother and were used to put Gods in them. But for them, that sister bond is very real. I never felt any animosity between the two for anything that happened. Just support. And I loved that.

However I struggled a bit with other aspects of the book. The worldbuilding for instance. The royals are born with a god in them and it is what makes them the ruling power. There is apparently a big history of that. Our two main characters had a god put in them when they were children. Their mother found some book about that. It is just there but it is not build up. There are no details though you would think that be important. There are no details, no names and very limited interactions with the gods. They are suppose to be this thing, but they aren't really present. They could have just as well have had powers of their own because I'm not sure what the added point was of these gods. Even if this is to come in the future books, there needed to be more here to hook the reader. It was a really interesting idea but the execution really let it down.

As far as the story goes, I can see why there was a rebellion. The royals really weren't very nice people and they treated the people pretty bad. But for something like this, a rebellion, an entire city, there were not enough characters. It felt so incredibly tiny and limited. We were on the outside of the palace but all that this really served for were the romantic interactions between Sera and her guy. The city, the people, the rebellion. None of that was build up.

To Cage a God is for the most part an entertaining read, even more so if you like a good bit of romance. I do not feel compelled however to wait/pick up the next book. This plot is wrapped up and it has not left me curious about anything else.

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This was a ebook ARC received through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. I hadn’t ready any of May’s work before so I really was going from the blurb. This book was also part of a Buddy Read with Louise over at FoxesFairytale. She read the book before I did, but was very good at keeping spoilers to herself.

I mostly enjoyed this book, but there was one aspect that I just wasn’t here for. The male POV character. For me he was a bit flat. I didn’t understand his motivations, or even how he’d managed to stay alive. He was the antithesis of the red-headed, green eyed chosen girl who doesn’t know how pretty/special/powerful she is. Who does nothing to earn that status. He felt like a roughed up, dirty version of that. It doesn’t help that I could see glimmers of Kaz from Six of Crows but with a much less defined backstory, and unclear motivations. Sometimes he seems to be motivated with vengeance, other times lust but with his end goal being the rebellion. But there wasn’t enough backstory to make his cause feel worth it. For me, he wasn’t necessary to move the story on.

If I just pretend he wasn’t part of the plot then I loved it! There is an intricate fantasy world, skilfully built. And the characters are believable. There a romance that was just beautiful and engaging. Backstabbing and politicking in a recently bereaved royal household. Exquisite. The revenge plot line had motivation and purpose. At its heart, it was quite a small tale of vengeance and love but it felt all encompassing.

I believe this is a duology but it could definitely be read as a stand-alone. I would recommend it, don’t let that man put you off!

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High fantasy
Romance (M/F and F/F)
Revolution
Imperial Russia inspired
Dragon gods
Disability representation
Multiple POVs


I was so stoked when I first heard about this book. This follows the story of two sisters (Sera and Galina) as they try to overthrow an oppressive empire with the help of gods that have been grafted into their bodies. Although they are the main characters, we also get POVs from other characters as well totalling to 5 POVs which does help the reader understand the other characters a lot better. I loved the concept of the caged dragon gods that grant power and how a person’s status and power is based on the summoned god’s strengths and abilities. I just wished that this was further elaborated on in the story. The romance was enjoyable and I loved reading Galina’s romance more. I personally am not a fan of the writing style and I feel that some sentiments became repetitive and some scenes were long drawn. Otherwise, this was still an enjoyable read and I am curious as to what happens next in this duology.

Thank you to NetGalley and Daphne Press for this eARC in exchange for an honest review.

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Twin Crowns meets Shadow and Bones with an adult feel.

This was a nice light (which seeming as the content is quite dark) fantasy that combines politics and science in a new and inventive way.

Our dual protagonists are unique and steal the show in very different ways in this novel. Each is relatable, however, does not fall into predictable hero’s journey tropes.

While I would have loved to have seen a little bit more tension within the piece to make some of the plot points more dramatic - I think this type of NA fantasy builds nicely between exposing audiences to fleshed out queer romances and politic world building.

I would definitely recommend this for a New Adult reader, especially in the wake of heavy dragon fantasy like: Fourth Wing and Dragonfall.

3/5 stars for me

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I received both an audioarc and e-arc through Netgalley all opinions are my own.
3 stars because I'm nice. Probably more 2,5 stars.
Also this review contains spoilers.

This is the kind of book where it's good to dual read the audiobook and book at the same time. Due to the foreign words and names being used. It really helped me. Otherwise I would have been stuck at words I didn't know how to pronounce.
I don't think I would have been able to finish this book without the audiobook so I'm immensely grateful for that.

I have so many questions. But I also wonder if I just missed something when reading which I tend to do.

So dragons are gods I guess?
I don't really understand how some alureans are born with these gods inside of them. Like how are they chosen? What kind of gods exist?
Also the magic system. I don't fully understand it. Some magic can heal broken bones? But magic doesn't heal their illnesses?
Why does the other countries want to go to war? Is it to gain more land or did I miss something?

The lesbian romance was fine. The hetero one was eeh. I'm just not into jerks, especially not when said jerk tries to kill my sister several times. And then doesn't ever apologise for it. Even when she keeps him safe. They even point out that he haven't apologised yet and he just says it's implied that he feels sorry, eventhough he doesn't.
I wasn't a fan of the sexual tension, and it's not really enemies to lovers. They were never enemies, Sera just never communicated with Vitalik.

I was liking the book but at around 80% in when Sera finds out that her friend has been captured and is being tortured she decides that she NEEDS to bang her husband instead of trying to figure out a plan to save her friend what the actual fuck?!?!?!?!
I know that it comes from fear that she might never be with her husband again. But what the actual fuck??

It seems like I hated this book. But it was fine. I didn't love it. Wouldn't mind recommending this to other people either if they like russian inspired books. But if you know too much about the russian revolution I think, then you might not like this book.

It does follow a lot of common tropes and cliches.

The book doesnt end on a cliffhanger and most things had tied up, so you can read this as a standalone if you wanted to.

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Thank you so much to Netgalley and the publisher/author for accepting my request to read and review this one early!

I was so thrilled to be accepted for this one as the concept of caging Gods into humans was so fascinating to me. Alas, we don't get to see this process in the books, but I do think how the magic system works and how the gods effect the humans they are trapped within is an awesome concept.

This was such a strange reading experience as on one hand I was HOOKED. I adored how character focused this book is as all my favorite fantasy (and fantasy romance) are character focused books rather than plot focused. So seeing relationships develop was awesome. The romances were both incredible.

HOWEVER... the plot left something to be desired.

1. I felt for one that 3 of the 5 perspectives we followed were all fairly identical and it could have been limited to just 1-2.
2. We didn't really get much world building or history, it was hard to see what this world looked like, what the people looked like etc.
3. There actually wasn't much plot beyond characters getting to know each other. A few events happened but for a 17.5 hour audiobook it was shocking that I can only recall a couple things that actually happened. Needed more of a story direction.
4. It felt like this was book 2 in a series. There was soooo much history between some characters and every character has a lot behind them that would have been super interesting to follow. I kind of wish this book were the second in a series and the first book was following the characters getting to this place.

Despite my critiques I really enjoyed a lot of this book and I am interested to read book 2 when it comes out.

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Thank you to Daphne Press and NetGalley for allowing me to review this ARC! To Cage a God was one of my most anticipated releases for the early half of 2024, and I read this in three sessions.

The first 20% felt… slow. I really struggled to focus and to connect with the characters. The next 30% I finally started getting into it. Vitaly and Vasilisa really started to save it for me, the most engaging characters in the entire book. Then today I read the last 50% in one sitting, absolutely obsessed with it.

I really enjoyed the magic system, the Zmey, and though this clearly needs a sequel, it also stands on its own quite well.

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