4 Stars
I went into Ice Planet Barbarians fully aware of the chaos I was signing up for. I picked it up because Ilona Mahar said it was a must, and… fair enough.
If you’re looking for something serious, this is not that book. But if you want a wildly entertaining, slightly unhinged, very smuty story with just enough plot to keep things moving, it absolutely delivers. The premise is ridiculous in a way that feels intentional, and the storytelling is surprisingly engaging underneath all the spice.
It’s fun. It’s weird. It knows exactly what it is and doesn’t pretend otherwise. Solid 4 stars for committing fully to the bit.
Shocker: it’s a kidnapping plot. Again. This time it’s the Solo kids, which should raise the stakes, but somehow it still feels like déjà vu in a different outfit. Leia (and yes, she spends a good chunk of the book sprinting toward danger) does exactly what you expect, while the rest of the story zigzags through some strange Force concepts and side plots that never fully click.
There are interesting ideas buried in here, but they feel like they’re floating in zero gravity with nothing anchoring them. The tone is also a bit all over the place, which makes it harder to stay invested even when things should feel urgent.
Not terrible, just… oddly forgettable for a story that involves kidnapping three Skywalker-Solo children. You’d think that would leave a bigger impact.
There are interesting ideas buried in here, but they feel like they’re floating in zero gravity with nothing anchoring them. The tone is also a bit all over the place, which makes it harder to stay invested even when things should feel urgent.
Not terrible, just… oddly forgettable for a story that involves kidnapping three Skywalker-Solo children. You’d think that would leave a bigger impact.
This one feels like being dropped into hyperspace without a map. There are a lot of moving pieces, shifting perspectives, and political threads all competing for attention, which made it feel more chaotic than cohesive at times.
The pacing is uneven, but it does start to find its footing as the story unfolds. I appreciated the ambition and scope, even if it didn’t always land cleanly. And then… that cliffhanger. Very much a “guess I’m reading the next one” situation whether I planned to or not.
Not a bad start to the series, just a little messy getting there.
4 Stars
I couldn’t put it down. The atmosphere does a lot of the work here. It feels thick, almost suffocating at times, and it pulls you deeper the longer you sit with it. The characters aren’t easy to love, but they’re compelling enough that you keep turning the pages anyway, even when things start to unravel.
This isn’t a light read, and it doesn’t try to be. But if you’re in the mood for something dark, immersive, and a little unsettling, it absolutely delivers.
I went back and forth on this one between 3 and 4 stars. I’m not a huge fan of multiple POVs, and this one throws in some random ones just to push the plot along. It messed with the pacing for me and pulled me out more than once.
That said, I did love the premise. The MC thinking she’s going through menopause, only to realize she’s actually turning into a werewolf? Super unhinged. The whole situation reads like next level gaslighting, and it kept me hooked even when the structure didn’t.
Not perfect, but definitely memorable.
Received an advance reader copy in exchange for a fair review.
That said, I did love the premise. The MC thinking she’s going through menopause, only to realize she’s actually turning into a werewolf? Super unhinged. The whole situation reads like next level gaslighting, and it kept me hooked even when the structure didn’t.
Not perfect, but definitely memorable.
Received an advance reader copy in exchange for a fair review.













































