
Member Reviews

Screaming? Me? yes.
I loved this book so much! The cover was eye-catching and the plot and story lines were mind blowing!

I liked this book, but I didn't love it. I think the writing tense (3rd person present tense) just didn't vibe with my brain super well and made it hard to get into. The plot was good and I enjoyed it and the worldbuilding, although Sascia was toeing the line of being brazen and overly impulsive for me at some points. Overall if the premise interests you and you don't mind a 3rd person present tense, I would definitely recommend!

This book put me in the mood to rewatch the Avatar movies...
Moth Dark is technically a YA contemporary fantasy with major romantic elements (bordering on being a romantasy), but I'd also be inclined to consider it partially sci-fi as well. This genre-bending story contains interconnected worlds, intertwined timelines, and queer longing, all woven together with beautiful prose. It's meant for readers who long for fantasy realms and epic love stories, who crave the dark and unknown.
Sascia has been obsessed with the Dark since it first appeared in her world six years ago, but what she doesn't expect to find in all of her exploration is a person...especially not an heir to the Darkworld who claims that Sascia has betrayed them. As it turns out, Sascia and Nugau are connected in ways neither of them anticipated or understand, and their worlds are bent on war. The storyline is fairly character-driven, with much of the focus being on Sascia's relationship with Nugau and her introduction to the Darkworld. Because of this, the pacing can be a bit slower at times, and while it admittedly did take a few chapters before I became invested, I was fully engrossed by the end. There's a bit more action in the middle and ending sections, which helped keep me interested as well. I really enjoyed how the concept of how time worked in Nugau's world and the fate binding them together, and I also found the imagery to be visually stunning. It's a very pretty book: pretty prose, pretty story, pretty pictures. I think some readers might not be satisfied with the ending, but I found it fitting in the context of the story, and I overall appreciated the message.
Because this is a character-driven novel, it comes as no surprise that the protagonists and the dynamics between all of the characters in general are very complex. Sascia is a compelling hero to follow, and I think she's perfect for readers looking for softer FMCs in fantasy. She has a lot of facets; her relationship with her family, the Dark, and her purpose are all conflicts that she interacts with throughout the story. I liked Nagau a lot as well. I found the representation of their gender expression (genderfluid, I believe?) to be incredibly well-written, and their shifting dynamics with Sascia were so intriguing and heart-wrenching. Otherwise, I thought Danny was a great character (we love a supportive family), and while the other side characters didn't all feel as complex as Sascia and Nugau, they were still entertaining to read about.
Moth Dark's stunning prose, beautiful world, and compelling characters reminded me a lot of Strange the Dreamer, but I would also recommend it to any reader who enjoys the concept of fate, romance across timelines, and dark worlds that you can easily fall in love with.
Thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for the free e-ARC!
4/5

“A story told in fragments of past, present, and future.”
Moth Dark is a stunning standalone timeline-crossing romantic fantasy with sci-fi elements - think The Time Traveler’s Wife meets Pacific Rim in a dark fairytale style. 🦋
Six years ago the Dark arrived in our world. Soon the Darkbeasts followed; dragons, griffins, krakens emerging from the dark causing destruction. In true human fashion, fear rules action, and humanity is looking to eliminate the Dark rather than understand it. However, for some it is a fascinating new world, one that can be monitored and lived with in harmony if we try.
One day, Sascia, a girl in love with the Dark, pulls something new out of the void; the mysterious heir to its throne, Nugau - who already knows her, and is hellbent on delivering her swift execution?!
Sascia and Nugau are from two separate worlds and they keep meeting out of time, but with war brewing as world tensions grow and timelines cross, they must find a way to fight for the peace of their worlds - and for each other.
Moth Dark is an incredibly poignant story, with great inclusion, discussion of gender, and is very politically timely, all wrapped up in a delicious romantic fantasy adventure.
“When? When do I love you back?”
“Oh, little gnat. I don’t know that you ever do.”
Thank you Penguin Young Readers Group and NetGalley for an advanced electronic copy in exchange for an honest review. Moth Dark comes out on October 28th.

When I tell you this is my FAVORITE book of the year, I am not joking. The way this book just reaches out and captivates you from the beginning. Sascia is such a curious person from the moment we meet her she out here doing something she’s not suppose to. This world is so beautiful and devastating, it’s our world, but kinder in a way.
One day a giant sinkhole opens up and terrifying creatures from myths come out and attack, so of course as humans do we attack back. This creates a war between these creatures of the Dark and our world. Our girl Sascia(pronounced SAH-skee-ah) is fascinated by this new thing gets herself involved in this war and sets to find a way for peace to overcome death and those trying to line their pockets with the continuation of destruction.
There is no way for me to speak into existence how INCREDIBLE this book is. The characters, the world, the representation, and the writing itself do everything right to bring the reader into this world that you never want to leave. Thank you Penguin Group and NetGalley for this arc!

Moth Dark is a darkly beautiful, wildly original fantasy that gripped me from the first page and never let go. Set in a New York reshaped by creeping shadows and strange creatures, it follows Sascia—a girl bound to the Dark in ways she doesn’t fully understand. When she pulls an elf prince, Nugau, from the Maw, everything spirals. They're enemies by fate, yet drawn to each other by something deeper, more dangerous.
Kika Hatzopoulou’s writing is breathtaking—lush, atmospheric, and aching with emotion. The world is immersive and strange, yet grounded in humanity. Sascia is fierce and flawed and unforgettable. Nugau? A genderfluid heir with a knife in hand and a soft heart underneath. Their relationship, slow-burning and intimate, is threaded through timelines and tension, and it works.
Themes of identity, queerness, and belonging are handled with care and nuance, The romance simmers beneath the surface, and when it hits, it hits. This is the kind of book that changes your internal weather. Dark, tender, and utterly spellbinding. I didn’t want it to end—and yet the ending felt perfect.
Thank you to NetGalley and publisher for the ARC!

When I tell you this was SO GOOD.
We got meeting in the wrong order, romance that nobody wanted but will mean that much more because of the time they do get together, conflicting worlds, impending war that they're trying to stop. Two beings that keep meeting, one reaching to the light, the other into the dark and deciding to reach out and build a bridge, rather than harm.
Moth Dark is making my top reads for the entire year. The ending had me absolutely happy and sobbing at the same time, it was beautifully sad.
Sascia feels an innate connection to the dark and specifically to moths from the dark world when it came crashing through into her own, mostly in the form of fauna and flora, but when she reaches into the dark, she first pulls out a hand, the next time she finds a dark elf princet attached to it, accusing her of treason she hasn't yet committed. She's fascinated by the other world, and would like nothing better than to step into it.
Nugau is from a gender-fluid people, the Aesin, a kind of dark faerie from the other world the Princet- they are the only child of their Queen. Trained for hard battle and trying to combat the destruction of their world and save their people, keeps running into this infuriating human woman- they keep being tossed into each other's path by a mischievous ancient god in the form a large Moth, the Itka that Sascia has named Mooch. If they can work together, they can save their worlds, but it'll be at the expense of their time together.
Please pick this up, you will not regret it.

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️💫 .5 (4.5 stars)
Moth Dark is unlike anything I’ve ever read — gorgeously strange, deeply emotional, and bursting with imagination. Kika Hatzopoulou creates a world where darkness isn’t just a backdrop, it’s a dimension of its own, teeming with life, magic, danger, and aching beauty. The concept of the Dark is one of the most captivating fantasy elements I’ve come across — richly built, mysterious, and wholly original. I was hooked immediately.
We follow Sascia, a girl endlessly curious about the Dark and all its secrets. Her pull toward it isn’t just fascination — it’s destiny. When she pulls a being from the shadows — Nugau, a genderfluid heir from the Darkworld — everything begins to unravel. Their timelines aren’t linear, their paths aren't clear, and the threads of love, memory, and war are so deeply entwined that you’re constantly wondering what’s real, what’s to come, and what’s already been lost.
The representation in this book is powerful and seamlessly woven. Gender, identity, and queerness are explored with depth and grace — not as a subplot or afterthought, but as the very soul of the story. Sascia and Nugau’s connection isn’t just romantic; it’s cosmic. Tender. Shattering.
I absolutely loved reading this book and enjoyed every second of it.
Thank you to NetGalley and Penguin Teen for the ARC!

In the dark, there be dragons.
The dragon is a Darkdragon, wreaking havoc in Shanghai after a rift to another world has opened. And now humankind can't fathom, can't calculate the risk coming from the Darkworld that clashed with their own - and thus they fear, despise and hate all that comes from the Dark.
Well, most of humankind. Sascia however, has been drawn to the darkness ever since her first encounter with it. And along with her some others that are fascinated by the Dark and show a unique connection. For Sascia and her cousin Danny it's moths that came from the rift and connected to them.
One day, Sascia pulls a humanoid from the Dark - Nugau, a genderfluid elf princet. And then she meets Nugau again, but they have no recollection of her. And then she meets Nugau again, dying and declaring their love.
Nugau's timeline isn't linear, but what is clear is that there is a war coming - and Sascia is the cause of it.
This is a story about light and dark, about fear of the unknown, about loyalty and fighting until you get it right. All against the background of a genderfluid, time-flexible word - two aspects that are explored intriguingly and with the maximum of respect. And with a message about war and who benefits from it.
I was drawn to this story from page 1 (dare I say like a moth to a flame?) and then it was a journey like no other. This has everything and more. There are even very well formed side characters with their own journey.
6/5 stars
Thank you @netgalley and @penguinteen for the eARC!
#MothDark #Netgalley #Bookstagram

I was SAT when I got the book and I didn't get up until I was done. Thos book gives everything. The romance was top tier

This was truly such a beautiful story. Summing it up to a fantasy, queer Romeo and Juliet is both not enough, and should also be enough for you to want to read this book. The yearning was so beautifully written. For love, for peace, for action, for change. If you are gender queer, or aren’t, but especially if you, are this is such a beautiful representation of acceptance and love—especially for a young adult audience. I can’t begin to explain all the reasons to read this other than that it will stick with you and make you feel a full range of emotion. This is by far the best book I’ve read so far in 2025. I cannot wait for it to be published. I will be purchasing a physical copy when it is out to reread it.
Thank you NetGalley and Penguin Group for the ARC.
This review is entirely my own and voluntary.

YA romantasy at its best. I’ve recently gotten into the genre and this book is amazing! I will be buying the physical copy!!

Thank you NetGalley for the ARC!
Moth Dark follows eighteen year old Sascia who has an unexplained connection to the Dark, embracing the creatures and flora and fauna from this world, until one day she pulls something unexpected from a dark crevice - an elf prince intent on killing Sascia.
This book gripped me from the beginning and I didn't want to put it down. The writing is so vivid and imaginative, I could feel myself in this truly unique and beautiful world. The characters add to this, they are written with so much depth and I loved the genderfluid representation.
Sascia is a wonderful character to experience this story through. I was in awe of her tenacity throughout, she is curious and fearless and unapologetically reckless. Her experiences and decisions are so thought-provoking, at times I could feel her pain at how much she wanted to do the right thing.
Nugau is an incredibly grounded character, as the child of the Darkworld's Queen they understand ruthlessness and bloodshed, but like Sascia they don't wish to see both worlds collide. Interwoven timelines mean their relationship builds so uniquely, but it also feels completely natural to their characters.
"You asked me to kiss you."
"No. I begged you."
The romance isn't the main plot but it's there in the background, shaping Sascia and Nugau's story. Their moments together are so tender and intimate, and at the heart of everything they accept each other for who they are, and who they will be.
"You have been my unraveling. All the seams of my being, the stitches I have crafted over my wounds - you have picked at the threads, unwoven the fabric of my essence, and now I am something new, something else, something yours."

Thank you to Penguin Teen and NetGalley for the opportunity to read this book early.
Moth Dark follows Sascia, a young woman fascinated with the Dark, a dimension of fae that access to has sprouted up around the world through holes of pure darkness and house many interesting species of animals.
Wow. The world of this book was incredibly fascinating and every little aspect of it we learned as Sascia dove more into the realm of the Dark made me curious for more. The characters were also fun and it was easy to get attached to them. I found myself liking Danny and Orran the most of Mooch was also fun.
One of my favorite parts of the book was the inclusivity and the way gender and expression was described for the Dark. I really enjoyed how fluid some of the Dark characters were, while others remained in one gender. There were no issues with pronouns that I noticed, which is always a plus, and I loved how Sascia’s friendship, love, and connection with Nugau remained constant no matter what gender they were presenting as.
It is a slightly confusing world and I did have trouble catching up in the middle section when the time jumps increased from a few hours to a few days to a month but the writing was so beautiful and the story was so interesting I was able to refocus fairly quickly.
Thank you again to Penguin Teen and NetGalley for the chance to read this early.
4.5 stars rounded up to 5

I enjoyed the writing style and how the book was set up but unfortunately it just wasn't for me, I didn't vibe with it at all. I'm sure other readers will love it though.

4.5/5 stars
Recommended if you like: parallel worlds, fantasy creatures, magic, time travel, enemies to lovers
This review has been posted to Goodreads as of 7/19 and will be posted to my review blog 7/31 and to Instagram 8/28.
Six years prior to the start of the book, a portal of darkness opened in Shanghai and a Darkdragon flew out. Since then, several more portals have opened, some big, like the Maw in New York City, and some small, like in sewers and basements. This collision of worlds means contact between humans and creatures like Shanghai's Darkdragon and others like Darkgriffins and Darkmanticores. Humans naturally found a way to fight back, with nova lights that can hurt or even disintegrate Dark creatures. But there is also contact with smaller, more benign creatures like Darkmoths, Darkferns, and Darkrats. Some people, like Sascia and her cousin Danny, are fascinated by the Dark, others are ambivalent, and others still, like Sascia's sister Ksenya, are terrified of it.
This is the world the book opens up into, with Sascia giving tours at the Maw to make money on the side after her Umbra Cohort stipend was cut. Brilliant, but more interested in bugs than classwork, Sascia managed to get into the elite group of students studying the Dark and changing the world...but then failed requirement that she also get into Columbia University. Oops. She's definitely down about it, but she's also kind of angry, because the work she and Danny are doing with the Darkmoths and Darkfauna really is saving lives, and she's kind of got a point that she's already doing that without an Ivy League education...so why does she need it? But Sascia also has a lot of guilt, and while she stands up for herself at the Umbra Cohort, there are other things in her past that result in her sometimes just trudging along to get along, no matter how much she might disagree.
The Umbra Cohort is an odd group. There's Sascia, as mentioned, and her cousin Danny, who is interested in Darkfauna. The two of them have been best friends since childhood and work together on their Darkmoth and Darkfauna warning map. Then there's Tae, whom Danny has a crush on, the 'golden child' of the program, who seems to be a genius among geniuses. He's standoffish and aloof, though this seems to largely be a facade, as he also comes through when it counts and does genuinely seem to care about the rest of the Cohort and about the Dark. Shivani works with Darkrats and is pretty open and friendly. Andres does genetics work with the Dark creatures, and is overall a bit of a mystery despite being with the group for several years. And finally Crow, a computer hacker whom we only ever actually get to meet via computer.
Sascia is someone who loves the Dark, wholly and completely, even with the danger it sometimes poses. She loves it more than the rest of the Umbra Cohort, who are deeply interested as well, but for Sascia it's everything. So really, Sascia is the perfect person to pull a person out of the Dark.
Thus begins the timey-wimey stuff. Because the prince who tries to kill returns as a princess on Halloween, younger and with no memory of Sascia...and then again a few days later, professing that they love each other and have failed to stop the coming war. I will say, the book does start a bit slow, but once you hit the 40-50% mark the action really starts to pick up, and the slower beginning is integral to setting the stage for the later interconnected parts.
Sascia, who loves the Dark and doesn't want to see it destroyed and is stubborn to a fault, is the perfect person to try and stop the war. She and Princet Nugau team up to try and stop the coming conflict, but as usual with things like this, when timelines get involved, it's very hard to avoid the inevitable.
Nugau is the child of the Darkworld's queen, a ruthless ruler raised in the tradition of bloodshed, but Nugau themself is less inclined to meet blade with blade. Like Sascia, Nugau does want a solution that doesn't end with the Darkworld and the human world going to war, and while their viewpoints clash at first, Nugau and Sascia actually end up agreeing on a lot of things. Nugau is definitely caught between what they think is right and what the people around them think is right. Nugau's mother wants to retaliate against the humans for their attacks (attacks the humans didn't even fully know were happening, what with the timeline mixups) and many of the other aesin (i.e., Darkworld humanoids) agree with her. But Nugau is determined to find a different path, and together with Sascia and some of Nugau's aesin friends, they're able to at least pull some other people to their side.
I would say the overarching theme of this book is choosing peace even when violence is easier. Both humans and aesin are inclined to reach for a weapon when a portal opens up into their worlds. There may be some peacekeepers on both sides, but those in power prefer war. It's easier, and it's profitable. But Sascia and Nugau again and again choose kindness and peace, often even when they're in direct danger themselves. It's often risky, and sometimes they mess up, but overarchingly they strive for a solution that sheds no blood.

Moth Dark by Kika Hatzopoulou is a radiant, unrelenting plunge into a world not so unlike our own—except for the gaping magical tear in the heart of Manhattan known as the Maw. It’s grim, chaotic, achingly real, and yet utterly dreamlike. From the very first page, I was swept into the dark tide of Sascia’s fight—not just against the systems that refuse to listen, but against the creeping erosion of hope itself. This book isn’t just another entry in the Romantasy canon—it’s a declaration that stories can be wild, weird, deeply queer, and devastatingly human all at once.
Sascia is the embodiment of so many young people today: bruised by the world’s indifference, still choosing to scream into the storm. She’s impulsive, raw, flawed, and ferociously principled. Watching her resist being softened or silenced was one of the most affecting parts of this journey. The narrative never asks her to be perfect—only persistent. And in a landscape where most people choose survival over change, she’s the flicker of fire refusing to go out.
Enter Nugau, the prince who wears time like a threadbare coat. Each version of them—older, younger, changed—feels like a different key to the story’s many locked doors. Their genderfluidity is woven into the tale not as a plot device but as a matter of truth, a refreshing shift from the “coming out” tropes we often see. Their love story with Sascia isn’t clean or chronological—it’s knotted, jagged, but no less poignant. It asks big questions: What happens when you love someone whose timeline never matches yours? What does devotion look like in a world that keeps fracturing?
The time travel mechanic is one of the most dazzling elements—fragmented, emotional, and always a little dangerous. You’re constantly on edge, never quite sure which Nugau will step out of the shadows next. It lends the story a sense of mystery that’s more heartache than thrill, more poetry than logic.
The worldbuilding is gritty and lived-in, stitched together with tension and tenderness. Hatzopoulou’s writing is gorgeously unafraid—her sentences often feel like incantations, and her vision of a politically frayed, environmentally fractured city hits with eerie resonance. The normalization of queer identity across the board makes the story feel like a glimpse into a better literary future: one where queerness is neither hidden nor explained. It simply is.
For readers who like:
-Magical realism
-Queer protagonists
-Enemies-to-lovers
Final Verdict
Moth Dark enchants, unnerves, and unravels. With its lyrical prose, layered world, and searing sense of justice, it’s a book that hums with power. It refuses to tidy up pain or dim the light of protest, and in doing so, it becomes something rare: a YA fantasy that dares to be both radically hopeful and unflinchingly real.
Grateful to NetGalley, Penguin Young Readers Group and Kika Hatzopoulou for the opportunity to read an advance copy of this story in exchange for an honest review.

Moth Dark is a book that I recall reading the blurb of, knowing I wanted to read, then forget entirely what the book was about. Very glad I forgot cause reading this was the most welcome surprise!
It’s simply incredibly different to all the YA fantasy/romances i’ve read. It keeps the focus on Sacia at all times. How she feels inadequate, her relationships, her turmoils and her joys and successes. How you can try everything and still fail, how you can be lucky (or unlucky), but ultimately she is a beetle- charging headfirst into turmoil and persevering at all times. The writing in this was so smooth and extremely well paced- whenever something felt like it was just starting to track, Hatzopoulou brings in something else swiftly to keep the story going, which really helped with the jumping timeline (which in hindsight, I have a feeling is ’Nugau’s POV’ the whole time) and sweeping narrative. I LOVED knowing that it would end (almost) in tragedy because when you see the future, it will end up being your present regardless of you trying to stop it because that’s then your past, but not knowing how exactly Sacia gets to these moments is really what kept me intrigued.
The last 25% of the book had me in a chokehold honestly. I truly FELT for Sacia. I wanted her to succeed so much, but we had seen her future already so how else could it possibly end? Hatzopoulou makes some subtle critiques of our world, namely along the lines of ‘come with a blade, a blade you shall meet’ about how war feed war, and someone has to be brave enough to choose a different path- the only person who gains anything is ht blacksmith making the swords.
Nugau and their group are hilarious at times! The genderfluid representation in this is described in such a way that is both educational to the reader, yet because its a logical plot point (moths and insects), doesn’t actually feel in your face at all, or like you’re forced to hear about Hatzopoulou’s personal thoughts. Simple explanations that fold into the story only aided in the immersion of the Moth Dark and Darkness. I was surprised knowing that moth were human-like and have their own laws that are just as impractical as human laws. That they’re also struggling with the war as much as humans are- that they too need to brake the cycle of the blade.
Honestly such a unique, special book and I hope it gets the recognition it deserves in its rightful spaces- this is so much more than a romance. It's an excellent critter on how we view ourselves and our enemies. My only gripe is how I wish the battle at the end was drawn out more, and that we had more time with our characters and the new world! I would recommend this to fans of The Book of Night (Holly Black)!
Thank you so much to Penguin YA and NetGalley for sending me this ARC!

Thank you to Penguin Random House and NetGalley for the ARC!
If you’re craving a romantasy that throws linear storytelling out the window and asks what love means across fractured timelines, Moth Dark might just blow your mind.
From the first page, I was drawn into Sascia’s strange relationship with „The Dark“, a creeping alternate world bleeding into NYC. What made this story really stand out, though, was its unapologetic queerness, not as a theme to explore but as a fact of existence. Nugau, the genderfluid elf princet, comes from a culture where gender is a fluid, ever changing concept and it was honestly such a breath of fresh air to read a book where that was simply accepted. No overexplaining. No big coming-out moment. It just felt natural.
Then there’s the time travel. And not the neat, tidy kind. This is chaotic, emotional time travel. Nugau appears in different versions, different ages, different memories each time Sascia meets them. It keeps you off-balance, but in the best way. The tension of not knowing which Nugau you’re going to get? Chef’s kiss. The narrative unspools in this haunting, non-linear rhythm that makes you question fate, free will, and whether love can survive when you’re never in sync with the one you care about.
That said… a tiny gripe. The fight scenes. I’m all for an underdog arc, but six days of weapons training does not make you a threat to elite soldiers. It felt like a bit of plot armor kicking in, especially in a book that otherwise felt so grounded in emotional realism.
But that aside? This book is a knockout. Lyrical, inventive, queer as hell, and emotionally rich. I devoured it.
📚 Highly recommended for fans of:
• Non-linear timelines
• Queer fantasy
• Enemies-to-lovers energy
• Worldbuilding that respects your intelligence
Final Verdict: 4.5/5 ⭐️
When met with a blade, with a blade you‘ll meet.

Thank you to the folk over at NetGalley, and the author themself for posting on Instagram about it, for an early available e-reader of this book.
I loved Threads that Bind, but I am absolutely obsessed with Moth Dark-- Hatzopoulou brings all her powerful world building, all her enchanting overlaps of near-future climate change and sheer whimsy, all the dazzling magic of legends and lore. I don't think the description does this story any justice, for if it weren't for my familiarity with the author, I might not have picked it up. This has some of the near-future feelings of Pacific Rim, with monsters breaking through black holes and terrorizing major cities; but it also has some of the beauty and sweet sweet yearning of The Cruel Prince. Moth Dark proves to be a happy medium between all genres: equal parts contemporary academic, magical fantasy, science fiction, and reality.
I was completely lost in the world of this Grim Manhattan, split by a magical Dark hole in the center of the city called "the Maw"-- consumed by it, I thought about how this world isn't too different from our own. As someone who reads a lot of YA literature, seeing this generation grow despite the political atmosphere (and literal climate atmosphere) shifting like the ocean tides, I have grown to have hope despite it all. Young People are loud, generous about sharing their thoughts, and untested-- just like Sascia (SAH-skee-ah). Thank you, Kika, for providing that pronunciation guide early (and adding more as needed throughout); this was a really good strategy.
Sascia knows she's not a perfect person-- everyone keeps reminding her as such, for every mistake, every outspoken thought, every rebellion. But she knows what's *right.* Hatzopoulou offers a story about living in spite of that, pushing when no one else cares to push, and standing up for more than just yourself. She's naive, she's hopeful, and she's everything beautiful about young people today. Nugau (Noo-GOH), despite their stories and legends, is the more grounded character-- they know the stakes, but they hope in spite of it. They are each two sides of the same coin, flipping endlessly in the unknown of "knotted time."
Moth Dark is not Romantasy I expected, its the Romantasy we deserve.
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- Trigger Warning: biting, gore, and familial trauma.