Uh, holy fucking shit, y'all. It's a time-loop novel that actually works for me, and it's fucking beautiful, it took me a moment to remember to breathe. There are moments that feel like having your heart ripped out, but it's not a downbeat novel at all, it's a novel about how love is worth fighting for, worth dying (repeatedly) for; it's a novel about hope and how it can be armor. There aren't many authors who do slow-burn romance the way Harrow does, integral to everything else but no more dominant than it needs to be. Even the villain is more ambitious than anything else, at least at the core (the complete ruthlessness, the dehumanizing of enemies and allies, that stuff is built on the ruthlessness' foundation). The prose shifts registers amazingly well, the more everyday language of the story and the slightly heightened prose of the chronicler, the POV characters talking so much about what the other does is handled gracefully. This doesn't start quite so rough-and-slow as some of Harrow's other novels, probably because the loop thing keeps at least some parts of the novel's story kinda short.
A happily-ever-after only lasts as long as you're willing to fight for it.






