this will be my first and final contribution to the lightlark fandom





#interview with the vampire#iwtv#the vampire armand#assad zaman
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this will be my first and final contribution to the lightlark fandom

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
So I just finished Oro's POV from the new Duelling Crowns book, and I have thoughts -- actually, rants -- about how Oro is not the main love interest, because this man is literally a walking green flag.
You don't understand -- I literally picked up this series when in my shadow-daddy era, ready to be a Grim girly with all the publicity this series got that I got absolutely whiplashed when I found out that Oro was not only not the main love interest, but he is also not the favoured love interest. (I did not know the names of the love interests, only brief outlines of the plot; and idk that there were 2 LIs, I just thought that the second ship was with some kind of secondary character that people preferred over the main. I do not like spoilers)
Anyway, to right this injustice of Oro being constantly sidelined (dude was in like 20% of book 3 and somehow still carried the whole plot. Insanity -- even coming from an Oro stan), I have decided to compile an argument on why I believe, undoubtedly, that Oro is the better love interest:
Spoilers below, obviously.
The slowburn is real. There are so many parallels, so many connections and build-up in Oro and Isla's story. a) Her shooting and flicking his crown only for him to give it to her at the end of Book 1. b) Him saving her when she fell of her balcony and healing her head, then her saving him when he got exhausted and fell, dragging him into a lake so that he can heal himself. c) Him saving her from the vines and refusing to leave her to deal with the thorns alone, then her saving him when he was injured and bringing him into a cave and staying with him until the sun went down. d) Him hating his gilding powers then her getting him to use it on her dress, and then having their symbol be a gilded golden rose. e) Her looking at her wedding gown's gloves and immediately thinking about when she was shooting at Oro during one of their early encounters. The whole build-up in Book 1, when they slowly learned to trust one another and work together, and then them being so domestic in Book 2, was just pure endgame energy. You can really see the journey these 2 people took, from skeptical enemies to actual lovers. Meanwhile, Grim was just so handsy and touchy the entire time. I mean, I get that they were together for a whole year prior, but they aren't anymore (wholy his fault) so why does he keep trying to grab her whenever he is an arm's length from her? Also, everytime I try to read Isla's flashbacks in Book 2, it is just overrun with scenes of kissing and touching. Like, that scene in the hot air balloon could've been sweet, but then BAM, his hands are on her and they are in his room again. Everytime Grim begs Isla to "remember our love", I have to squint HARD at the pages because where is the love? I can't find it. *picks up megaphone* will the love please identify yourself in this room? Is it in the room with us? All I see are his hands and lips on her. That's not love, babe, that's lust in a trenchcoat waving candy at your horny ass. I read someone mention before that Isla was basically a lonely, touch-starved barely-adult when she left her room and "fell in love" with the first hot guy she saw and there really is no disputing that claim. But, please, dear Grim-stan reader, try.
Boundaries exist. In all my years of reading, there are few fictional men with Oro's levels of boundaries. I mean, Isla literally threw herself at him several times, but he never faltered, never gave in to his pants, and always took care of her. Remember when Isla wanted to sleep with Oro because she was plagued by dreams of Grim? She was down to her underwear, ready to replace the thoughts of Grim with thoughts of Oro instead. Yet Oro took a step back. He knew that this should not be the way their sex goes, that it should not be a blanket to cover something, that she was hurting and desperate, so he got on his knees and asked her what was wrong. Then he gave her his room because Grim has never been there, and she would not think of him when she was there. Oro could've just taken off his pants and went with her plan -- I bet Grim would've done that -- but Oro would not take advantage of her when she was down. Instead, he went to find out what was really the problem and solved it. He really went "let's unpack your crisis, not your clothes". Another example is when Oro and Isla were in that cave in the desert during the sand storm. Again, Isla got naked in front of him and tried to advance on him. Yet Oro used his limited powers to use Moonling magic to cool her down and get her to sleep, preserve her strength. His morals are literally through the roof and he would never give in to either of their desires when he knows that it is not right, not how their story should go.
He knows her. As mentioned, he was in like 20% of Book 3. He flew across the world to check on her in the middle of the book, then he was let in on the plan and action in the last few chapters. He was waiting with Grim for Isla to appear with Lark, but it was taking too long, and he suggested to go to her. Grim disagreed and told him Isla's plan. And. He. Was. Like. Wtf? Ain't. No. Way. In the 4 pages that is his POV, dude heard the plan, and immediately went "that's the plan?? That's a horrible plan. She must have another plan." And he was right. I cannot stress enough that Oro literally figured Isla's actual plan in seconds after he heard the BS that Isla fed Grim. I mean, Grim was literally around the entire time when Isla was concocting her plan and he did not think anything was amiss. Bro thought that he was so important that he did not realise that Isla already had everything she needed (with Oro's power) to open a portal elsewhere. Grim can spend a whole year and then some learning about Isla's favourite foods and whatnot, but it takes true connection to immediately hear something and know what she was actually thinking. Grim knows facts about Isla, but Oro knows Isla.
He would give up the world for her. One line that stood out to me from Oro's POV in Duelling Crowns is when the castle was in peril and he knew that Isla could not be the one responsible for it as she would never (willingly) do something that hurt innocent people. (I'm looking at you, Grim, person who started an entire war for Isla when she was just living happily in Lightlark. Jealous bitch. It wasn't as if she was kidnapped against her will when she stayed at Lightlark; but one can argue that she went against her will with Grim at the end of Book 2 just so that he would stop the whole stupid-ass war.) Yet, Oro was willing to give it all up for Isla when he refused to kill Grim to save his land, even when Isla was screaming at him to do it, because he chose her life over Lightlark's. I mean, they were this close to winning, this close to ending the war, this close to killing Grim -- but he could not do it, because killing Grim would mean killing Isla (literally the only romantic thing that Grim has done). Another -- less dramatic -- example is when Oro lets Isla take the heart of Lightlark. I mean, he literally entrusted the life of his island and his people to her. He thought that the Heart was what first spun the curses and he trusted her to use it's power for good. He put his island's fate into her hands.
He never lied to her. Do I even need to bring up how Grim a) stole Isla's memories against her will. b) betrayed her by working with Aurora/Celeste. c) kept secret of all that he knew about her past and father. d) gave her a forever binding marriage necklace without even telling her what it was. e) kept her guardians in his castle without telling her, even when he knew that they basically kidnapped and silenced her since young -- something he can definitely relate to as his own father was the same, just a lot more homicidal. f) (again) started a whole war to claim her back, killing thousands when he knew she would never want that. Meanwhile, Oro's only offence was not telling her about Lark -- but I would argue that this is also Grim's offence, and he kept it from her longer since he knew her longer. Oro has been nothing but truthful to her, telling her his plans and his secrets.
He protects her. One scene that gets me was when Isla went to Wild Isle, and used her emotions to fuel her powers to grow the plants there to trap Nightshade soldiers during the war. You know, the ability that would slowly kill her the more that she used it? The ability that Grim taught her? When Oro first found out that Isla was draining herself, he immediately forbade it and told her that losing her was not worth it, that they would find another way. But she was desperate, so she went back, and did it again. And what did Oro do? He found her, carried her back to the castle, and healed her. He didnât scold her when she was down. He didn't berate her with I-told-you-sos when she became so drained that she was wavering between life and death. Oro had every right to be pissed and disappointed in her, yet he never lashed out, and just gently healed and took care of her, held her when she cried, when she realised her own mistake in using such power.
Their powers, together, are whole. Oro has Sunling, Moonling, Skyling, and Starling powers. Isla has Wildling and Nightshade -- and newly acquired Starling -- powers. Those are literally all the powers that exist (that we know of, at least as of book 3). When Isla was saying that she, Oro, and Grim needed to work together to open the portal, I was literally screaming "No, you don't!". Isla and Oro are enough. They have everything they need when together. They complete each other. Periodt.
She hates the cold. There was this scene in Book 3 when Grim takes Isla to somewhere after their wedding, and she was shocked that she never knew that the place existed. And his response? "I thought we've established that you hate the cold." (This might not be verbatim, but the idea is there) Like. Bruh. That is not an excuse to just not show her things??? Meanwhile Oro, Sunling, is always warm. She will never be cold when she is with him. She will also not overheat with him too, like (again) when they went to that desert on sun isle and he used his limited strength to Moonling ice her to cool down. He literally warms her inside and out.
Sidenote, their metaphor is cooler and tangible. "We are infinite"??? What is that?? That's so vague. What does that even mean? Meanwhile, Oro compares them to the Forever Flame. You know, the fire that has been burning since the creation of Lightlark and will remain burning forevermore? The very real flame that has burned through disasters and withstood wars, just like Oro and Isla in Books 1 and 2? Alexa, play "Burn for you" from the Unofficial Bridgerton Musical by Barlow and Bear.
Lynx likes Oro, too, and dislikes Grim.
Need I go on? Oro is clearly the only choice here. As mentioned, I really did try to like Grim, and I literally went into the series ready to fall for Grim. But it did not happen that way. And that should say something in and of itself.
a close up of a face concept for this drawing
(Btw this is a stupid joke drawing for a beautifully cringey book series)
an oc template inspired by alex aster's lightlark series / can be used for any oc / cc universe, though.to access the doc from the pdf file,
đđĄăa ÂŁ4.00 detailed google docs template made by ki ! â ïœĄââăâ đČăâ dark / fantasy theme, inspired by alex aster's lightlark franchise. đ” ăăif you can't get access to the doc, please message me on discord (@princesszvko) directly with proof of purchase!
images / previews of the doc is attached to the post. information on how to access the doc is on my payhip; but i'll write it here anyways. ïčâ once you press the link at the top, you'll be taken to my payhip. once you're there, you can purchase the doc and it'll give you a pdf file. when you open the file â press my username at the top (@/princesszvko) and you'll be taken directly to google docs !
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"The gods don't listen to people like me, but I would go on my knees and beg them to let me keep you. You were once the bane of my existence... and now, you are the center of it."
Nightbane â Alex Aster

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Deeply honored to see my Lightlark wiki shitposting highlighted in the latest KrimsonRouge Skyshade roundtable video.
Nightbane, Bane of My Existance
@wanderinginkspots @avocadobrick hope you enjoy and that your eyes don't glaze over lol
I wrote a review/analysis about Lightlark in *checks* December 2023, and said âbut you couldnât make me read the second book at gunpoint.â
well here I am. Two years later. This somehow ended up longer than the first review at justtttt under 13k words. I was in the mood for a bad book and this was the first one that came to mind. Lightlark was truly one of the worst books Iâve ever read. Itâs the literary equivalent of a pinterest mood board with the odd tumblr post about worldbuilding ideas built upon overused enemies-to-lovers tropes. Itâs all aesthetic with no substance like a cheap costume to show off a farce of a fantasy world.
Plenty of people have talked about poor characters, writing, worldbuilding, and whatnotâwhich I will touch onâbut Iâm going to focus on something different so itâs not simply a rehash of what other people have said: state structure, culture, social and international relations in the Lightlark verse!
âBut Bookie,â you say, âThatâs boring, no body cares!â
I care. Possibly some other rando on the internet that might happen upon this post might care.
âBut Bookie, itâs fantasy, it doesnât have to be realistic.â
Absolutely true. Aster clearly doesnât know much about politics, policies, government structure, etc. Which is fine, you donât need to be extremely knowledgeable about every single detail in order to write your story. Also politics can be very difficult to write realistically because real-life politics is hugely complicated and messy. HOWEVER, as someone who has spent the last few years studying these subjects and how large of a role politics (supposedly) plays in the plot makes it mildly infuriating when Aster randomly tosses something out without thinking about it.
DISCLAIMER: I am not an expert in this topic, just a junior in my bachelor degree. My area of study focuses on how society and policy interact, with some international relations and political philosophy/theory. I am not super knowledgeable about governmental or international organizationâs processes. I am also much more familiar with democratic and authoritarian states than monarchies, moreso democratic ones. I actually know nothing about how monarchies work in terms of their bureaucracy. I am also more familiar with states (democratic or otherwise) being in constant tension with its citizens and/or actively oppressing them, rather than them living in relative harmony. I will delve deeper into this later.
Since I used an ebook, Iâll use the percentage of how far it is in the book instead of page numbers. Also, I didnât spend too much time flipping through the book, because I donât have the time.
some quick clarifications: a nation is a group of people, state can refer to both government and a territory but Iâll use it to refer to government/institutions; a nation-state is when a nation is also a state. Nation, state, and nation-state are used interchangeably with country. Aster appears to use realm interchangeably with nation and state, so I will too.
A little recap of the first book:
Lightlark is set in a universe with six realms/nations: the Wildlings, Sunlings, Starlings, Skylings, Moonlings, and Nightshades. Each realm has its own magical powers. 500 years ago, all realms had unique curses placed on them, which would only be broken if a ruler was killed (without an heir). After a war, the rulers began to hold the Centennial once every 100 years in an attempt to end the curses, either by killing one another or by finding an alternate solution. The book follows Isla Crown, the ruler of the Wildlings who is powerless, but wants to save her people nonetheless. Thereâs a love triangle between a brooding blond man (Oro) and a creepy brooding black haired man (Grim). Thereâs more plot twists at the end than I can count much less name. Isla somehow ends up with Oro while Grim goes to build an army or something. Truly nothing of substance happened in the first book. Or the second really.
In book two, Isla tries to open a vault on Wild Isle. It rejects her and she sees a vision of death and destruction caused by Grim. Anyway, she and Oro bond. Her memories with Grim are starting to come back. Some monsters theyâve never heard of (except Cleo) called dreks attack Lightlark during Islaâs crowning ceremony for being the Ruler of Starling, but it isnât until a third into the book that we start to see the beginnings of a plot. Grim casts his illusion magic to show death and destruction and says they have a month to evacuate Lightlark before he destroys it. The majority of the rest of the book is the different realms prepping for the fight and arguing whether to fight or flee. The key to beating him is locked away in Isleâs memories, which is the excuse to have such a large chunk of the story set in the past, where she and Grim are doing a fetch quest for something that doesnât even matter in the end, but more importantly are falling in love. The end of this book genuinely pissed me off for multiple reasons. Iâll get into them later.
Scale
The sense of scale in this world is completely wack, which is why I have a whole section dedicated to it. Initially reading the first book, it seemed rather small and concentrated. But in book two it seems that Aster tried to stretch it larger and so now I have zero sense of scale even though we now have a map of Lightlark. The map greatly confuses me because I assumed it was a main island with small satellite islands for each realm, with the newlands much farther away. This is not the case. It vaguely resembles the European continent. Landmarks are far from each other. The Abbey isnât in the agora (which I think is also the main city?) and appears to exist on its own. Sky Isle has mountains that stretch out of view? Iâm confused. It doesnât get any better with the newlands. It apparently takes months to sail from the Wildling newlands to the Nightshade ones.
We do get some numbers, but first I want to draw your attention to this section:
âMy people have already started harvesting their own crops, but we will need aid to achieve an assortment of diet and agriculture now that they are dependent on farming. Iââ âHow many of you are left?â Soren interrupted. She frowned. âIâm not sure. As you knowââ âYouâre not sure?â Soren asked, eyebrow raised. She could feel her face go hot. It was a reasonable question. The kind a good ruler would know the answer to. âDo most of your people know how to wield power?â âI donât know.â âHow is housing? What has the rate of reproduction been in the last century?â âI will have to find out,â she said through her teeth. âDo youââ (6%)
A lot of people have said that this is Aster looking in the comments and taking a shot back at people for questioning every tiny detail. I donât disagree, but these are valid and important questions from a policy standpoint. (Something I will nitpick is that Isla considers this as a âlack of wisdomâ on her part, which it isnât, itâs a lack of knowledge which likely has resulted from a lack of having a real government with the ability to do a census). For the context of the world, Iâll admit itâs out of place, but if it was phrased differently, it could have been more natural. Granted, itâs asked when theyâre eating dinner, but they are a collection of rulers, officials, and representatives, this is stuff they discuss constantly. Especially considering that theyâre talking about a region that has (from what we have seen/led to believe) very little state power and control. Iâll elaborate on this later.
Anyway, the thing is when you have a character ask these sorts of questions, you are opening yourself to having them answered. And they are rarely answered.
There are hundred Starlings on Star isle âgive or takeâ and an unknown amount on their newland. This is minuscule compared to everyone else. Moonlings have 100 healers on Lightlark and triple in the newlands (no, we donât know the ratio of healers to normal people). In the last book, it was mentioned that dozens of Moonlings were claimed by their curse EVERY month, because on the full moon, the tide would drown them. There are thousands on Lightlark in total, and in one scene of a festival in Nightshade, we get this...lovely description:
Thousands of people made currents through the streets and filled each shop to the brim, so much so that she watched someone fall through an open window in a bar and land right in a pile of vomit. (60%)
We are never given a solid indication of the size of the Wildling population, but thereâs a moment where Isla takes note of TWO different people being malnourished when sheâs observing a crowd. That implies that is a very tiny crowd or that hunger is not as widespread as initially thought (I doubt the latter). More likely, Aster wanted to give a sense of the hardship by giving two NPCs some color but inadvertently gave them too much focus. Especially as the book goes on, there is a sharp decrease in her flowery descriptions and everything but Grim starts to look like a white wall.
HOWEVER, there are mentioned to be multiple villages of Wildlings of varying sizes. We do know that some (all?) villages have lots of abandoned, dilapidated buildings because their population has shrunk, but thatâs all the description we get. How big are they? How far away are they from each other? Do they interact with each at all? Is there a village/city around the palace or is it just in the middle of the woods?
So, how big is everything? Unclear. Granted, your fantasy world doesnât need a population census presented in text or anything, but having such an undefined idea of scale really messes with the reader.
State Structure
Stick with me here. Iâm going to try to make this interesting to anyone who hasnât read the same material I have. Quite frankly, because of the fantasy setting (and sometimes poorly defined aspects of the world) I canât analyze this in certain lens that I would have.
Something to note is that not all the realms are equal because of how they were impacted by their curses, which affects both their society as a whole and their state. This is noted multiple times throughout the book, though it never has much weight. Wildlings were cursed to kill anyone they fell in love with (something I completely forgot until rereading Crowâs fantastic analysis to remind myself what happened in book 1 because it was never brought up in this one) and eat human hearts once or twice a month. As a result, they are a struggling nation with a low population. Even after the curses ended, they are struggling to sustain themselves. Letâs put a pin in that for now.
Starlings were cursed to all die at 25, which I assume has quite a devastating impact on their knowledge capital, especially when they are such a long lived race*. Having your officials, advisors, powerful wielders, etc die constantly at such a young age restricts their ability to continue to grow as a nation or even sustain a functioning state.
*When I read the first book, I was never fully certain whether or not they are human. Because with the powers and long lives, I kind of assumed they werenât. Also Wildlings eating âhuman heartsâ was never explicitly called cannibalism. I am now (mostly) sure they are human.
As for the rest of them⊠sure their curses arenât good, but pretty manageable. Nightshade canât go at night or they insta-die. Same with the Sunlings and going out in the day. The tide rises up every full moon to kill any Moonlings near the shore, somehow killing dozens of people each month after five centuries. This is mentioned to be bad for their economy. Skylings canât fly anymore.
You might think that there would be stronger international ties between Starlings and Wildlings because they are at a disadvantage compared to the other stronger nations that look down at them. And as morbid as it is, Starling could provide Wildlings with a steady supply of food. Nope.
The thing that stuck out to me is that most of them donât appear to have a government aside from their rulers? I mean, nobles and courts are mentioned a few times but they donât really have a role other than technically existing. Granted I donât know how monarchies structure their governments with the bureaucratic stuff (I doubt Aster does either). At one point itâs mentioned that neither the Wildlings nor the Starlings have courts in this passage when Isla is talking to Grim in a flashback:
âIf you have any desire at all to survive the Centennial, you will not tell anyone in your court either.â Her court. She didnât even know what that was. Celeste didnât have a court, just her string of guardians who died every few years and were replaced, an endless cycle. Terra and Poppy were the only people Isla saw regularly. (48%)
Again, since Iâm not familiar with monarchies, I did a quick internet search to see what a court is in this context so I didnât make a fool of myself. Oversimplified, it seems to be what I thought it was, a collection of nobles and advisors that oversee government functions, as well as social and religious life. Because a single ruler cannot oversee every aspect of running a country even if they have absolute control. You need to divvy up tasks and put them in the hands of people who are knowledgeable about them.
So, why the hell does Isla, the ruler of her realm, not even know what a court is??? Granted, she is very sheltered and her guardians have been leading the realm as she grew up, but this is like. Bonkers, right? Also Starlings do have a nobility, at least on Lightlark, implying that the nobility/court is in charge during the 99 years that rulers are unable to access the island. (They are, somehow, unrelated despite there being a tiny population. I do not know why this was mentioned).
Iâll talk about it more later, but I am constantly baffled at how unprepared Isla is to rule. She doesnât even know basic things about her own culture. Is the book implying that her guardians neglected this part of her education because they wanted to remain in power? Because I see no other reason why they wouldnât teach her this stuff. Isla trying to become a better ruler was a plot line that for sure did exist on paper, but it was never wrapped up well. Because other people do the work, not Isla. Iâll more into that later, but right now I want to focus on this section during Islaâs little humanitarian aid episode:
[Wildling village leader] proposed the Wildlings be temporarily consolidated into a few key villages, so help could be centralized. A vote was conducted, and every person agreed to host their neighbors for the time being. Many Wildlings gave up their own homes to the volunteers for the week they planned to stay. Lightlark chefs began teaching Wild-lings how to safely prepare meat. (23%)
(interesting how Isla says they are dependent on farming, yet they are being taught how to prepare meat. Livestock is never mentioned, so I assume they are hunting, though I donât know if this confirmed or not)
Even if Isla is inexperienced, itâs weird that she is taking a complete backseat while her people make the decisions. That doesnât do much for her legitimacy as a rightful ruler. In fact, this is kind of undermining it. Whatâs to say her people wonât realize that âhey we can do this stuff on our ownâ and revolt? Aster I guess. This scenario makes logical sense, I suppose, in terms having a wider reach in a shorter amount of time, but it doesnât answer tiny questions like âhow far away are villages from each other?â and âhow do several key villages (key how? Economically? Geographically?) just move into together for an undefined period of time without overcrowding or conflict arising?â
Also notice how Wildlings is written as Wild-lings once? Yeah we donât get a clear explanation why sometimes the realms/people are hyphened. It only happened to the Moonlings in book one, but now Wildling, Starling, and Nightshade (mostly Nightshade) are getting the same inconsistent treatment. I think (maybe??) itâs supposed to differentiate people who live on Lightlark and the diaspora, but itâs super inconsistent and would mean the Wildlings and Nightshades should always be hyphened. The only other explanation is that itâs a typo that neither Aster nor her editor caught which would only go to show the lack of care either of them put into this. Is it a big deal? No, but it drives me nuts.
Iâm not going to bore you with political theory, but honestly the Wildling realm feels a bit like itâs living in a Hobbesian âState of Nature,â which is a sort of âevery man for himselfâ society. That is not good. It means thereâs no one to enforce your rights or state to protect you. You can steal and kill without repercussions. Itâs a sign of a failed or even collapsed state, where the state no longer has legitimate power over its people or borders. Unsurprisingly, this is not addressed.
The Wildlings seem to be a failed state, but I canât really analyze the particulars because 1) my knowledge on weak/failed/collapsed states is from ~2 academic papers and 2) the Wildlingsâ situation is very different from real life examples. A weak state is one that can provide some basic services and security, but it isnât sufficient and generally has some insecurity/conflict. A failed state canât provide them and is embroiled in conflict. In real life, failed states are often the result from state-imposed violence on its own citizens, civil wars, and government corruption. None of which exists in this world. Also none of the realms seem interested in expanding their borders/conquering one another, so the issue of having no legitimacy over borders (especially with islands) is a moot point.
We get zero insight in how Sunling, Nightshade, or Moonlingâs governments operate besides mentioning they have nobles. I assume they have government responsibilities, but they just sort of exist on paper. Iâll get to Skyling in a second because thereâs something we need to address.
See, thereâs a curse that if a ruler without an heir dies, then all of their subjects die instantly. Why? Weirdly enough, this was not explained in book 1, but in book 2. Three quarters of the way through. This is so stupid, not only how it was revealed (the Starling common folk are somehow the only ones who know this and have been researching for centuries to break this curse) but when it was revealed. I have been wondering why this happens for almost two full books and it is CONSTANTLY brought up. This is something that should have been explained early in the first book, but noooo Aster wanted another plot twist. Or probably didnât even come up with the idea yet.
âBecause thousands of years ago, the kingâs ancestors had a Night-shade create a series of curses called nexus, designed to keep the people weak. Everyoneâexcept for his lineâwas cursed to only be born with a single ability. And people were cursed to be tied to their rulers, so power could never be overthrown. Nexus was meant to keep us all weak. Subservient. Loyal.â (73%)
THERE. IS. SO. MUCH. POTENTIAL. IN. THIS. CONCEPT. AND ASTER DOES NOTHING WITH ITTTTTT
I can think of a billion different ways you could explore this concept but the worst possible way to do it is for the focus to be entirely on the elite. This is like if you want to write social commentary on how capitalism is bad and then write about philanthropic billionaires.
Anyway, weâve established that thereâs some sort of âdivine right of kingsâ thing going on here in a much more literal sense. All the realms are monarchies because they kind of have to be. Right?
So how the hell did the Skylings become a democracy?????
There are so many factors (both realistically and specific to this universe) that would prevent them from being a functioning democracy. Obviously because they are not the focus at all, we donât get a look into how their government operates besides the fact that they have elected officials instead of nobles. Itâs a little unclear whether itâs a pure democracy (everyone votes on every single thing) or its a democracy in broader terms, where their representatives vote for the people (Like the US, we are technically a republic). I would assume that the Skylings are democratic in a broader sense, but Azul says that his people voted for him to be guarded at all times and wasnât allowed to travel to other newlands, which hints at it being a pure democracy. Hereâs this quote that had me with my head in my hands:
Skylings valued choice over all else, as evidenced by their democracy. It was an alluring principle, Isla thought. What she wouldnât give to hand off all this responsibility to someone else.â 7%
âDemocracy is about choice!â
But that doesnât really capture what democracy is about. Aster (from what I understand) had lived in Florida her whole life so I understand why that might be her impression of what democracy is. Also democracy as a concept sure as hell isnât about handing off responsibility.
I actually borrowed the first book from Hoopla to see if we could get more info. If the search engine on it works correctly (I have some doubts), the fact that Skylings are a democracy is mentioned literally ONCE in this rather short and shoved-in moment:
Isla was desperate to change the subject. âAre you close to your nobles?â Sky Isle had been surprisingly well-kept. The nobles seemed to be doing a good job of running it in their rulerâs absence. Azul frowned. âThere are no Skyling nobles.â She must have looked confused, because he continued. âWeâve had a democracy since I came into rule. The Skylings who are invited to the smaller events are elected officials. All big decisions are made based on voting from my people.â Isla blinked at him. âSo, if they decided they didnât want you as ruler . . .â He shrugged. âI would step down. Though that would certainly complicate things, what with the Centennial and the way our powers are passed down,â he said. âIâm lucky they have been happy with my rule.â She had never heard of a realm being run that way. (Lightlark, 25%)
Aster even acknowledges how difficult it would be to be a democracy with how the world functions (both in this passage and in the second book), which leads me to the question of why even introduce it as a concept? It feels entirely pointless especially when itâs basically a throw away line. I think there could be a fascinating story made about people who want democracy but canât because they are tied to their rulersâ lives in a very literal sense.
It never truly matters that the Skylings are a democracy. Part of the appeal of democracy is so that 1) people can gain and have their rights respected and 2) have the peopleâincluding minority groupsârepresented instead of the elite. Itâs not so much about choice as it is having a voice. The rulers seem to meet their peopleâs needs well enough with what they have and I donât think there are any marginalized groups (such as religious or ethnic minorities) within each realm that would be oppressed by the government or majority of people. So why would they want or need a different regime type?
Later in the book, Isla offers to make the Starlings a democracy. Why? She feels that they should be ruled by one of their own, which is a surprising show of maturity and awareness I didnât expect from her. However, the person she hopes to be their leader of this democracy is like âyeah thatâs cool in theory but it doesnât solve the problem that the people are tied to the rulerâs lives.â So again, it doesnât matter. Notably, Isla never offers to make the Wildlings a democracy, despite thinking itâs a good system and not wanting responsibility early on.
One thing that bugs me is that there is no tensions between the realms with them being a democracy and the others being monarchies, which is very unrealistic. The other realms are chill with it even if they donât see the appeal. This also ties into the fact, that we are shown that the common people as a whole, seem to be relatively content under their regime. Part of this is because we generally only get the narrow perspective of the elites of the world, with the odd citizen who loves Isla or rebel who tries to kill her.
However, the rebels exist (even if they arenât all that important) and we are told there is discontent. Early in the book, this occurs:
Oro nodded. He made to face his own representatives when Azul said, âThere is something else. Rebellion on the island is brewing. Our spies have heard the whispers, carried along the wind.â Oro frowned. âWhat do those whispers say?â âThe people are not pleased with how long it took to break the curses, or our decisions as rulers.â âWhich realm?â Oro asked. âAll of them. The ones on Lightlark, at least,â he said. His gaze shifted to Soren. âYes, even Moonling.â Rebellion. Would the people of Lightlark really attempt to overthrow Oro, or any of the other rulers? Without heirs, their rule represented a total monarchy. Rebellion was futile, when killing a ruler would result in the death of everyone in their realm. Their expressions were grave, but no one looked too surprised. It made Isla think rebellion was not a new concept on Lightlark. (6%)
Annnnnnd this is never revisited unless you include the rebels, which I donât. Why? Weâre never shown this. We donât see the common people in general, but thereâs never any sense of tensions between them and the elite. We donât see people protesting, peacefully or otherwise, organizing etc. Any people we do meet face-to-face are pretty happy with their rulers. Iâm actually very interested in seeing how the rulers would react to a protest/rebellion because historically, monarchies would stop peasant revolts with the highly effective tactic of âkilling a lot of them to scare them into stopping.â Authoritarians and democracies have done the same. I have a feeling Aster wouldnât take that route (except for maybe Grim, but then there would be some kind of excuse for him that they were really bad people actually).
Revolution would have a really interesting turn of events. I would have loved to see it. The people shouldnât be pleased with their rulers, they barely put any effort into adapting their societies to the curses! Starlings especially, since they are constantly given the short end of the stick. But ultimately this culminates in the rebels appearing for two (?) scenes, one where they try to kill Isla and the other to give her information. Guys...this isnât revolutions work...
Part of the reason I canât analyze these books is because thereâs no violence. No, Isla and Grim killing random people doesnât count, and even the battle at the end doesnât really count. Itâs a one-off, itâs not constant or everyone constantly in fear of it occurring. Violence doesnât even need to be physical fighting, it can be damaging to culture, stripping workers of rights, etc. So much of what I have learned is about states inflicting violence on their own people OR other more powerful countries/international organizations inflicting violence upon a country for their own interests. This world doesnât function like that because the elites are the good guys.
International relations
Alright here we go: they make no fucking sense. For one, there is so little definition between all of the realms that you donât get a great sense of how and why they interact. While each realm has their own shtick, we donât see how they ever really work together/trade to mutually benefit. While tensions between realms is kinda integral to the plot in both books, thereâs not a lot of weight behind any actions that leaders do (either for themselves personally or for their nation).
Something that occurred very early on set how tone deaf Isla (and the book) is with this sort of thing. For context, Isla in the last book stole Auroraâs powers so the lives of the Starlings are tied to her, technically making her their ruler. She hasnât been yet accepted or coronated though, so sheâs in a weird waiting space. She is requesting an outfit for her first official outing as ruler of two realms and this what she asks for:
âMake me look like a sword,â Isla had told the Starling tailor Leto. âOne thatâs more blood than blade.â A mixture of Wildling and Starling. (3%)
That poor tailor. What are you supposed to do with that? I know that Isla is total badass with more weapons than clothes, do you really want your first impression as a ruler of two realms (perhaps the only one in history) to look like a bloodsoaked sword? If you want to give off âmenacing warlord Iâm-going-to-conquer-your-realm-via-bloody-conflictâ vibes this works. If you want to leave a good impression on your new people, maybe reconsider. Iâm assuming Isla just wants to look like a badass though, but this comes off like a middle-schooler writing a their cool edgy main character.
Also, Iâm confused why Isla chooses red to represent the Wildlings when 1) green to represent growth would fit better and 2) is she not trying to get away from the stereotype that Wildlings are bloodthirsty monsters? I think the only thing stupider would be wearing a communist flag as a cape to international meeting discussing democracy and sit next to the US official.
Anyway!
Little bit of clarification: Nightshades no longer have an isle on Lightlark and only live on Nightshade. Wild isle on Lightlark is abandoned and they only live on Wildling Newlands. Sunlings are completely bound to Lightlark and therefore donât have a newlands. Skyling, Moonling, and Starlings all have their own isle and newlands. For 500 years, Lightlark had a perpetual storm that only lifted during the 100 days of the Centennial; there are no other times that people can enter or leave and there is no communication between realms and their diaspora during those 99 years.
People have nitpicked about the fact that there are bananas and chocolate on Lightlark considering that they canât import anything and it is alluded to being a temperate not tropical climate. Also the fact that a 100 year storm would completely devastate their agriculture. All valid. I donât feel the need to elaborate.
We have almost no indication of how much realms mingle either in the newlands or on Lightlark. Lightlark is the only places where common people regularly interact with different peoples, yet interrealm marriage seems to be extraordinary rare unless youâre a ruler. Rulers on newlands donât seem to meet ever unless they are on Lightlark. Which is stupid. Imagine if world leaders never interacted or communicated with one another unless they were coming together for a UN meeting. Okay, the UN might not be a great comparison because thereâs 193 countries that are a part of it, but regardless.
Like I said earlier, you would think that Wildlings and Starlings sort of being the underdogs might have stronger relations. The Starlings could give their dead to Wildlings in exchange for elixir or gems. Nah. It seems to be implied that Wildlings are completely cut off from other realms and therefore donât trade with them. Isla at one point notices a Nightshade using a coin currency she had never seen before, which implies that realms use different currencies or she/Wildlings donât use coinage. A barter-system makes most sense for them.
I totally forgot about this, but Azul in the first book shows off an emerging mailing system using wind powers. Cool! Useful! Never brought up again.
Moonlings seem to be economic powerhouse of this world because their economy/trade with them is mentioned about three times throughout the two books. What do they trade? Uh. Healing? Bandages? Something. I think that Moonlings are the only healers/doctors in this world, which completely changes their role in international politics. That gives them immense leverage. âOh, you want healers? Only on our terms.â Cleo could threaten to withdraw her people from other realms if thereâs something going on there she doesnât like. This is kinda shown with her and her people leaving Lightlark and joining Nightshade but itâs not really portrayed as a heavy loss, in part of the oh-so-special Wildling elixir.
Can I talk about the elixir now? I can? YIPPIE
It was mentioned a few times in book one, with the rather confusing conditions about how it functioned (pain reliever or heals) that basically disappears during book two and is just a healing potion. The elixir functions similar to the starstick in the narrative; it solves problems to move the story along quicker and doesnât do a great job in covering it up. I wouldnât call it central to the plot but in a sense it kind of is? Thereâs a subplot where itâs made from a rare flower that is difficult to grow and so theyâre running out of elixir. We never actually get the sense theyâre running low because Isla uses it left and right, FAR more often than she did in book one.
At 40% of the book, nightbane gets mentionedâyou know, the thing in title?âwhen Isla is at the black market in Nightshade. It doesnât get brought up until later and Grim tells her that itâs fantasy heroin. Itâs forgotten about until way later when Grim brings Isla to a field full of nightbane flowers. But wait a minute, these are the same flowers that are used for Wildling elixir! Plot twist, elixir from these plants made by a Wildling makes healing potion and when its made by a Nightshade itâs hard drugs. They should trade together! Keep this in mind, Iâll bring it up again.
I will give Aster this: the quote she uses at the beginning of the book has layers (exactly two, but layers): âMy bane and antidote, both before me.â I assumed that this was referring to Oro and Grim and rolled my eyes. I was pleasantly surprised that it was tied in another way.
However, Iâve got a tiny little question. Why does the realm that can famously grow things HAVE TROUBLE GROWING A SINGLE DAMN PLANT. The supposed tension of them running out of flowers feels pointless when this question isnât answered. Is the climate? Is some stupid magic reason?
Speaking of economics, I had a bit of an inside joke to myself that Aster was going to somehow insert capitalism/neoliberalism into Lightlark. It wasnât, which is for the best, but it would have been sooo funny and I would have torn it shreds. I would have brought Marxist theory into it for the sheer absurdity. However, thinking about this made me realize that 1) if Aster had wanted to do Global North/South commentary, other realms exploiting the Wildling for their land and natural resources (like the gems that are supposedly so numerous you can trip over them walking around) it would have been a great tie in and 2) what does the average person do?
Lightlark is a pretty average âvaguely European medieval inspired because itâs not specified otherwiseâ fantasy. I know I am looking WAY into it. BUT. Are they mainly agrarian and most commonfolk are based in agriculture (do some of the realms have feudal systems)? Have they industrialized? What do realms have to offer each other in trade that isnât magic based? We have zero sense of what the commonfolk do because they just donât matter or exist until they do forânot even convenienceâjust to show that Isla is a good or bad ruler.
Culture and society
Remember when I said Iâd put a pin in that Wildlings are struggling to sustain themselves? Iâm bringing it up now. Not only is there the very big plothole of âthey can grow things at an extraordinary rateâ but it isnât delved into the exact reasons why they are struggling. Itâs implied that they are harvesting food pretty consistently, so why is food a struggle? The reasons are implied at best. It seems that the knowledge of storing food is lost, as well as not getting balanced diet, though that second one is a little out of place since that takes longer to identify and address than a couple weeks.
Also why is there no shock among people that they have to eat multiple times a day? Would that not be an extreme shock when youâve spent your entire life only needing to eat a heart a month? No?
During Isla plus some random people from Lightlarkâs brief stint in humanitarian aid (Isla forgot to tell her people this and they were almost attacked on sight for being outsiders. The volunteers didnât know what they were volunteering for until they meet up with Isla), they show Wildlings how to prepare and cook meat. They also fix houses, provide a steady food supply, and give them ânew skills and resources.â Interestingly, disease is never mentioned especially odd since the Wildling Newlands is tropical. Education for the masses is also never mentioned, so Iâm assuming that is there is no institution that provides it, even though literacy or lack thereof are never mentioned. Most likely it never crossed Asterâs mind.
The thing that bugs me about this little stint is that it feels so superficial and like itâs a checkbox Aster wanted to tick. Isla is supposed so worried about being a bad ruler and concerned for her people, but this whole thing is covered in a couple pages. She doesnât even do most of the work, a Sunling takes care of the situation. Isla talks with her people but the only one we see is Wren, the leader of a larger village, and proves to be far more competent as a leader than Isla in the few times we see her. We donât even get to see Isla interact with the common people in any meaningful manner, itâs all off screen. The entire thing is also solved so quickly, which hmm. Forgoes a lot of potential in several ways.
This leads into probably my biggest grip about these books: there are so many opportunities for social commentary about how concerning the relationship between the Global North (Western countries) and the Global South (aka the âThird Worldâ though that language is outdated).
Stick with me here.
Aster has Colombian heritage, her middle grade series that she wrote before Lightlark is based on Colombian folklore, which is cool. The Wildlings are supposed to be based on her heritage. I say âsupposed toâ because it isnât clear in-text and I didnât realize it until Marines (who is Latina and Black) pointed out the stereotypes. Wildlings are ostracized by the rest of the realms and are struggling far more than the other realms. While each realm has its problems, they appear to have more than enough resources to help and donât. Are you seeing the connection here?
Starlings are also a struggling nation, mostly due to their curse. Early on, a representative of the Starlings Maren says this:
âFor centuries, we have been an afterthought. A blip in your ancient lives. We have been treated as disposable by many. Taken in the middle of the night. Subjected to labor, and torture, and sometimes worse.â She looked at the king. âYou executed those found guilty, but so many fell through the cracks.â She grimaced. âStar Isle is in ruins. I canât imagine the newland is faring much better.â She looked to Isla. âWe need a ruler.â (6%)
Crazy thing to drop that trafficking and slavery is a thing in this world*. Never talked about again of course, but again, similar things that occur even today in the Global South at the hands of the Global North, usually in the form of multinational corporations/neocolonialism that is always brushed aside or under the rug. Are you seeing the connections here?
This interpretation might be just a tad influenced by the fact that I am currently taking two different international development courses this semester, both of them emphasizing that the Global North was only able to develop because it heavily exploited the Global South and continues to do so today.
Even so, I love social commentary in fiction, itâs another way that you can enjoy media beyond its âsurface levelâ story. Now. Do I think that Aster would have been able to write this well? Eh, probably not. Iâm hesitant to criticize her in this way because I have no idea how attached she is to her heritage/history. However, considering how she build a world that has inequities but doesnât address them, and how many of the difficult topics she touches in her book that are not handled great, I have my doubts. Sheâs too busy making her dolls horny for each other, not even making them kiss.
(*Weirdly enough, there seems to be a sex work/trafficking problem in Nightshade that Grim (or Aster) doesnât address. There is a scene where Isla pretends to be dancer/stripper/sex worker to get information out of some dude, which exists purely for her to dance sexily in front of Grim and includes the sentence âHe was staring like a man entranced, standing predatorially still.â [60%] Brother eugh)
On a similar note: Islaâs clothes. The books feel the need to constantly hammer on Islaâs clothes in a way that is insanely frustrating to read. It either stuck out more in my memory when thinking about the first book because it bugged me so much, or her outfits werenât described as often in this one, but every single time her clothes would be brought up as immodest/barely covering anything, it would trigger me.
Iâm convinced that Aster didnât read her own book before writing the second just in general. Specifically, Iâm convinced that she completely forgot that itâs normal for Wildlings to wear little or no clothes in literally the very first chapter of her first book. Sure, Wildlings are known for being sexually free (which is also constantly harped on), but there are many cultures where bare/exposed bodies are not inherently sexual. If this is what Isla grew up with, then what does she consider immodest or improper? Youâd think that she would have a completely different concept of immodesty from other realms. While there are occasions where Isla directly states that wearing some of these clothes make her uncomfortable because of how exposed she is (which are ALL in the flashback sections where Grim doesnât give her another option), in the first book, we never get a reason behind why she doesnât like wearing these sorts of outfits. Actually, itâs not even clear that she DOESNâT like them because of some of her clothing decisions in book 2.
This is something I noted in my analysis of Lightlark, but I didnât expand much on it. Itâs pretty clear that itâs the authorâs own opinion coming through her character and wanting to establish that she (Aster or Isla, take your pick) isnât like those girls.
It was black and gave her Wildling clothing competition for impropriety. It hung by two thin straps that looked one wrong move away from snapping, had the lowest-cut bodice she had ever seen and a slit so high, there was very little fabric in the middle holding it all together. (60%) A quick, thieving trip to the night market later, she was dressed in about as little fabric as possible to still be considered clothed. [âŠ] Before, Isla had felt embarrassed by the amount of skin she was showing, but now she saw she was wearing almost the most fabric in the room. Her dress was black gossamer, with a dipping neckline, two pieces covering her breasts, then coming together in the middle. It had a slit up to her hip. (71%) Her dress was tiny, sky blue, and strapless. She had glued little gems around the sides of her eyes. Glitter dusted her collarbones and shoulders. He had bought her each of these itemsâwith very specific instructionsâbut he still looked surprised. (79%) Her new red, metal-woven dress whispered against the smooth floor, feeling almost like chain mail [âŠ]. Her bare, tan shoulders. The silk-and-steel corset. The slit in her dress revealing knee-high boots sheâd had made, because they were more practical than her heels or slippers. (3%)
That first dress she decides to ditch underwear because the slit is too high, which is crazy work. You guys have wire bras, tank tops and tight-shorts-that-are-definitely-booty-shorts-but-canât-be-called-that, but no fantasy thongs? Iâve also got many questions about Isla making her own boots (which are, predictably, never mentioned again) and why sheâs focused on them being practical when sheâs wearing a sleeve-less dress with a high slit and a metal corset but pop off queen I guess.
Not only does the constant borderline slut-shaming mixed with ânot like other girlsâ syndrome drive me nuts, this again had the potential for both culture clash and commentary. Think about it, if Isla had come to the Centennial with her normal outfits and the other rulers mocked/looked down at her for it while sheâs confused, would that not have given this an ounce of depth? We would have seen something that is normal (and not inherently sexual) to her being objectified and sexualized by outsiders. This could have been commentary on how people perceive WOC or indigenous culture/women, but noooo.
Weirdly enough, Wildlings are always seen as the slutty, seductive temptresses but then we get a brief look into Nightshadeâs culture which is. uh. Distinctly more sexual. You could say that because Wildlings are majority women that they are demonized for their sexuality while for Nightshades, a lot of the sexuality is centered around pleasuring men (a culture of one-night stands with the ruler, the sex-worker/stripper section for the thief), so itâs seen as natural or what ever BS. However, it doesnât even seem to occur to Aster that she created this double standard. Isla is very startled by the clothing and ball orgy (idek man), but she doesnât have quite the same thoughts about âimmodestyâ as she does toward her own Wildling clothes. Like in this section:
Women wore clothes she had never seen in other realmsâ landsâboots that reached their thighs, dresses with chain mail woven through, pants that were glossy and shimmering. Compared to them, Isla was wearing far too much clothing. She kept her head down and her hoodâa black one she had procured in another marketâbuttoned at its front, so as not to show what she wore beneath, the only other dark-colored clothing she owned, a deep-plum silk dress meant for sleeping. (40%)
Not only is this just sort of bizarre, it paints Isla as kind of chaste and naive which is uh. A Choice when these flashbacks are of her and Grim getting together when she was 18/19 and him 500+.
Anyway, letâs delve deeper into the culture of Lightlark. Itâs very surface-level in general and even realms that get more focus are still very hazy. We get stuff like âSkylings celebrate orbsâ and âWildlings have a festival revolving around growth.â The whole color-coding thing is still present, but for all we know they all wear (beside Nightshades and Wildlings) the same clothes in different colors.
One thing that didnât appear nearly as much in this book as book 1 was the listing off of each realm doing something, which thank god. Itâs always presented clunky in the same format of âThe Wildlings were/did X. The Sunlings were/did X. The Moonlings were/did X.â etc etc. I think the only time it showed up in this format was in an early chapter where they have a feast.
A special drink was prepared, a Sunling specialty. [âŠ] It tasted of honey and burned like liquor. The flames licking the edge of the goblet stroked her cheeks as she drank, then sank into the dregs of the drink before simmering away completely. The first food course was pure Skyling. It was a floating feast, served in a flowerpotâminiature vegetables still tied to the roots, flying about, that one had to pin down with their fork to eat. [...] The second course was Starling. The fine silver plates contained a single orb. Once all were served, the Starlings snapped their fingers in unison, and the orbs exploded, revealing a cut of unfamiliar meat, carved into precise pieces. Large saltlike rocks formed a circle around the protein. Isla bit into one and startled when it burst like a firecracker in her mouth. The Moonling course arrived last [âŠ] Blocks of ice were presented with live fish still swimming within them. Their eyes were wide as they tried to navigate their quickly melting confines. (5%)
Even though Aster is trying to paint a very whimsical and diverse assortment, it lowkey doesnât really make sense. The Moonling course is meant to be a statement about Lightlark falling apart and the people representing the people. Sure I guess. Whatever. People have talked about the animate (alive?) flowerpot vegetables, I donât feel the need to hash on it. Notably Nightshade and Wildling arenât represented; Nightshade makes sense but Wildling does not since Isla is the one that saved them all? Should her culture not be represented? If I were in her shoes, Iâd be pissed.
Does this imply that Wildlings have only subsided on hearts for so long that they have lost knowledge of any recipes or dishes? That has HUGE implications. Food and culture are heavily tied together, to lose your ability make cultural dishes is a huge rupture for people. Itâs a form of violence, even if in this case itâs not really intentional. Preventing people from growing certain crops, hunting, or making culturally significant dishes has been used against marginalized groups as a facet of genocide. Sorry that got dark pretty quick but thereâs just so many things that you could (or maybe just me lol) extrapolate from not just the casual throw away lines, but the lack of mentioning something.
The actual story and writing
I was initially planning on just focusing on analysis above and not go over stuff others have before, but then I realized in the last few chapters that there is too much stuff that I want to yap about that wouldnât fit in it. This will be less structure and have a lot more hopping around. Iâm also not going to summarize the whole book because thereâs enough metas that do that, so apologizes if itâs a bit disjointed.
Hereâs the thing about the Lightlark series. Thereâs actually a lot of potential in the ideas Aster has. I wonât deny it, some of them would be really cool to see focused on. But thereâs too many elements and none of them are fleshed out well, so they end up feeling a bit like bullet points on a brainstorming list for worldbuilding ideas that got turned into a paragraph in the final draft. Much of these books feels a bit like a show thatâs on a shoestring budget, working with duct tape and a dream but has none of the charm and soul. The costumes are cheap and gaudy and the main cast are walking around cardboard cutouts of people. It wants to be high fantasy world but it doesnât want to commit the effort into building it.
There are few things more infuriating than wasted potential.
I donât want to say that Aster doesnât care about her series, because thatâs kind of a crappy thing to accuse and she did abandon her middle grade series for this one (because it didnât garner nearly as much internet fame as she hoped). But at its heart, the Lightlark series is built on tropes and what BookTok likes, which in my opinion is the worst way you could construct your book if you want it be well crafted. I believe that Aster is more focused on writing a book that gets a lot of attention rather than one thatâs well crafted.
Which leads me to her actual prose. I do think people are a tad too harsh. Yes, there are some truly terrible lines, such as the infamous âLightlark was a shining, cliffy thingâ and her horrendous attempt at foreshadowing by calling the sun âyolkyâ a couple times. But if you throw enough enough spaghetti at a wall, some of it bound to stick. Not only that, but apparently Aster has mentioned in a Tiktok that she canât/has trouble mentally visualizing scenes which does explain some things, but the way that people have commented on it is. Hmm. I havenât seen anything too over the top, but it certainly has a âha ha stupidâ element to it.
I also struggle with mentally visualizing scenes. Some people canât mentally picture things at all, which is called aphantasia. I didnât actually know that people can have crystal-clear visualization until a few years ago. I can picture something from a movie/show Iâve seen very clearly, but my own is very hazy. I tend to have white wall syndrome BAD unless I put in a lot of effort to build a scene, which is in part why fight scenes are so difficult for me and means that a couple paragraphs of description can literally take me hours to write. I focus a ton on body language to âshow not tell,â but what a person looks like? uh.
Anyway, some people have said that her prose uses pretty simple language. I feel like I personally canât criticize authors for having more simple language since my own writing comes off as kind of simple. I also struggle to color my writing without making a fitting but rare word seem out of place. However, something I do when I read is write down words or short phrases that catch my eye in my notes for my current wip. Usually action words since writing fight scenes have always been the bane of my existence. Do these words ever actually get incorporated into my story? Usually not. But Iâd like to think the process helps me think more deeply about how to better my writing.
Where am I going with this? Because I realized after finishing that not once while reading this book did that occur. Not once in *checks* 432 pages according to good reads. I regularly have instances where multiple times in a single chapter of a fanfic I will save a word or looked up what it means. That isnât a good look for a published book.
I donât think that Aster is too concerned with improving her prose. She did stop making pastry related similes and metaphors in book two, which were very bizarre and kind of silly, but it had the unintentional effect of making Nightbaneâs descriptions more dull because she didnât really replace it with anything else. I want to make it clear that Iâm automatically biased against super flowery language/purple prose because (new) authors have a tendency to double down on something that makes no sense but seems deep and poetic. To me it starts to sound like âhis voice was like a stone on a beach that was smashed upon its brethren for eternity until it was nothing more than fine sand.â What the fuck does that mean.
Lightlark was a great example of it, but certainly not the worst Iâve seen since reading it. Daughter of the Moon Goddess made some uh. Choices. I think about these ones a lot:
Her voice now cooler than a piece of unworn jade. (p. 13) Red lights flickers to life like fireflies dancing over the water. Except these were embedded in heads which reared up as Xiangliu uncoiled to full height, almost that of a young cypress. (p. 182)
Yet this sort of description is reduced in Nightbane. Does it make it better? I guess. I have less to complain about at the very least. I still have these lines to share:
âIâll do it,â Isla said, standing, putting a bookmark in the plaited conversations. (8%) âIf you hurt her, she will kill you. And then I will find a way to revive you so I can kill you again with my own bare hands.â (14%) Her spine was drenched in fear [âŠ]. (18%) âI will always be death. I will always be darkness.â (22%) [...] their swords clashing together like lovers [...]. (31%) A bird with silver wings cut through the sky like a pair of swords. (58%) [A sword] was made of two pieces of metal, braided together like lovers, until they formed a single joined tip. (67%) Grim wore a helmet with spikes that curved down over his nose, his temples. His shoulders had barbs like blades. Touching him anywhere would draw blood. His armor resembled dozens of scales, plated together. (75%) He was wearing his full armor, the one she had seen in her memories. Spikes everywhere. On his shoulders. On his helmet. He looked the part of a demon. (90%) âYou look ruinous.â âI want you to train me in something wrong. Something treacherous.â 80%
The dialogue isnât typically this bad, but my god. At one point Grim says to Isla âYou and me⊠weâre infiniteâ and I canâtttttttttttttttttt. Itâs so silly it leaves me giggling every time I think about it. It comes up three times. Third time is not a charm, Aster you cannot sell me on the infinite thing. Also she refers to Grim as a demon 23 times, which is at least 20 times too many.
Her writing style is very choppy, which works well in action scenes. But she utilizes it constantly. This has the unintentional effect of giving some of her prose like âspikes everywhere. On his shoulders. On his helmetâ the voice of an edgy middle schooler making fun of something.
Okay, now the actual story.
Itâs glaringly obvious that Aster just wants to focus on the love triangle and anything politics related feels like its only there because she felt obligated to include it. I actually did like how Isla and Oroâs relationship started to truly form in the early parts of the book. Their relationship feels more romance-driven, while Isla and Grimâs is more lust-driven, but it pretty quickly has a sexual element. It was actually kind of bizarre because Oro doesnât want to have sex with her until sheâs in a better mindset (she has a brief depression arc) which is good, but also denies her very clear advances. I think this supposed to make us go âOro is so mean, Grim always has sex with Islaâ but Iâm just baffled.
Speaking of sex, thereâs a fair amount of smut in this book. Being someone who physically canât read smut unless it is so terrible that it would already make my bones want to army crawl out of my skin, I canât judge whether itâs good or not. What I can say is that a YA book having as many (fairly explicit) sex scenes is a bitâŠweird. Sexuality shouldnât be removed YA entirely of course, but this level feels too much to me. I think people who âadvocateâ for YA books having more smut need to move on NA and authors that want more smut in their YA need to remember who the target audience is supposed to be and possibly reevaluate their rating, though I know publishing isnât that simple.
Much like in the first book, anyone who isnât Isla, Grim, or Oro just sort of pops in once in a while to remind you they exist. I was briefly deceived with the potential of Azul being a mentor to Isla before he said âI canât teach you how to rule, Isla. You must figure that out yourself.â (9%) which is so not how that works and is stupid beyond comprehension. Thatâs how you end up with a country without basic provisions like roads and civil rights, a civil war, revolution, getting overthrown by a dictator that people vote for because you let people starve etc etc.
There was a moment where Aster was going to expand Cleoâs personality beyond âbitch,â but it didnât go much farther than Cleo having a son that died. Isla reminds her of him for some reason. This somehow is her motivation.
There was a scene that I really liked where Isla portals to Celeste/Auroraâs old room, sits in some memories, and then starts trashing the place. I wish we had gotten a much deeper look into Isla and Celeste/Auroraâs relationship because itâs so crunchy. Having a good portion of the book in the past presented that opportunity but Aster didnât take it. She was Islaâs first and only friend for a long time. Aurora manipulated this already abused girl and never cared about her. Her betrayal out of all of them hurt the most at the end of Lightlark. Isla has complex feelings about her, but most of all feels hurt and angry. The scene is pretty short though and clearly is just setting up something for book three. Shame.
I talked about this before, but Isla is so cut off from her own culture itâs actually insane. She doesnât know basic things about her culture/people and itâs never presented as âoh my god your guardians isolated you so much you didnât know Xâ but more as a âhuh. Anyway.â Because in the real world, this level of lack of knowledge would be a red flag for growing up in a cult or severe abuse. I'm not really joking. The most glaring example is Bonded. Apparently all Wildlings are bounded to an animal companion. In Lightlark, it is mentioned that some Wildlings have animal friends, but itâs not clear that ALL of them do. This should shape how Wildlings live drastically but they are only ever briefly mentioned aside from Islaâs.
This entire thing should have been cut or expanded, but more likely scrapped. First of all, the bonding ceremony is stupid because itâs different for Rulers than commonfolk because rulers have to shoot their Bonded thatâs attempting to kill them because⊠it proves something? It only proves that Aster didnât think it through much because I donât understand how harming your companion and dominating nature is supposed to prove anything. Especially from a group of people that (I would argue) are indigenous-coded since that is very antithetical to their beliefs.
Moving on. Isla is like âsure Iâll do the ceremony if itâs still an option.â Then Wren bring her to a scary forest with a single arrow and leaves. Isla almost dies to a bear or something. She finds a giant black leopard. She Bonds with it. It turns out it used to be her motherâs Bonded. Wanna guess what itâs name is?
Itâs Lynx.
This is a new level of bad naming that I didnât know was possible. I try not to judge people on bad naming because I suck at it too, but wow. Thereâs also a Skyling named Sturm, which is German for storm (who wudda thunk it) but it honestly comes off like Aster changed a single letter.
Lynx doesnât really matter and honestly feels like he exists purely for the end where Isla rides him into battle. He somehow shows her a memory of her mother, which was kinda sweet. But there was a lot of missed potential in this? Lynx only accepts her out of obligation to his last partner. With the story so heavily focused on Islaâs (and Grimâs) past, would this not have been a way for her dig into the past and try to connect with a mother she never knew?
Speaking of which, itâs also very clear that Aster just wanted to show how Isla and Grim got together. A fair amount of the book occurs in long flashbacks in chronological order as Isla remembers the memories Grim erased. It didnât occur to me later how amusing it is that itâs strictly in chronological order, both for the readerâs sake of not getting confused and for plot twist reasons of course. These books are just about finding Mcguffins and the flashback is no different.
Actually I just realized how much it mirrored Lightlark. Isla is looking for human skin gloves, then Grim convinces her to help him find a magic sword, she basically abandons her own quest, they bond, etc. This is very similar to Isla looking for the bondbreaker, Oro convincing her to help him find the heart of lightlark and them bonding. If this was intentional, I think it would have been more effective if there were clearer differences made between Oro and Grim. If it wasnât, it shows how formulaic her writing is.
It starts off with Isla accidentally portaling to Nightshade and running from guards. Some lady sees her and is like âyouâre late. Here, put on this undescribed but assuredly slutty dressâ and she gets in a line up of women like that one scene in the Emperorâs New Groove where heâs told to pick out a wife. And Islaâs like âis this a battle formation? A dance recital?â Grim saunters in, picks her and brings her to his bedroom and the pieces finally click together for her when heâs basically pinning her against a wall. Oh so thatâs what those girls meant when they said it would be an honor to be part of the ruling line! This girl is denser than a brick. Grim asks for her consent, which is sort of ooc for him in general but considering heâs under the assumption she signed up for this, itâs even more ooc.
She says yes for some fuckin reason, he kisses her, fireworks exploded blah blah blah, she comes to her senses and stabs him in the chest then portals away. Delightful meet-cute.
I canât remember if he breaks into her room when sheâs in her nightclothes first or if she portals back with wildling elixir for his stab wound as an apology, hides in his huge-ass bathtub and almost sees him naked first. Those both happen. Eventually Grim tells asks her to team up with him and find a magic sword that does something and heâll help her at the Centennial, which is going to occur in about a year. Itâs lowkey annoying for two plotlines occurring in text at the same time that are fetch quests. The endless âthey have to find the thing to find the thing to do the thing but first we gotta talk to a guy who might know about the thingâ is so repetitive.
Thereâs a pattern of Isla portaling somewhere, getting her shit rocked, and Grim saving her but she doesnât seem to be making this connection and doing something different. In one of these (many) occurrences, Isla puts on the high slit nightshade dress, sneaks onto Nightshade, somehow gets hurt and Grim portals her away. I think my notes on this moment best summarizes both the next scene and my reaction of speechlessness and disappointment:
Bruh. Literally have my hand covering my face Bruh. For future me, while taking pieces of glass out of her hands, sheâs in her nightshade dress (possibly without underwear, pussy out) on his lap and she can feel him getting hard. Bruh
Also Grim has a necklace that prevent curses from working on him so he can walk in nighttime. WHICH COMPLETELY CONTRADICTS WHAT HAPPENED IN BOOK ONE
She had a theory that the Wildling forest might be a little like herâthat its quelling of powers also meant other realmsâ curses would be nullified. And she had been right. Grimâs jaw went slack. He stared up at the sky through the treetops in wonder. He couldnât access the dark power that thrummed through his veins, but it seemed the view of the dark sky above was enough. (Lightlark, 85%)
I remembered this specific moment because I thought it was cool to see Grim be able to see the night again after five centuries of not being able to and reconnect with that for even just a moment. (Also because immediately afterwards he tells Isla they used to be in love and he erased her memory.) So that moment has zero weight anymore. The fact that he has the necklace doesnât even get brought up again and exists purely to hint that he knew Islaâs father.
Thereâs a part where the sword is found in a dragonâs lair filled with traps. Isla accidentally sets one off and gets hit by one. Grim valiantly protects her and gets shot with TWELVE arrows. Itâs so over the top itâs goofy. Thereâs obviously a wound tending scene. The flashbacks are filled with all the tropes booktok loves. How do they deal with the traps later? Grim triggers them himself and takes it all on. Poor tortured soul without even a concept of a braincell. Isla allllllmost gets the sword, it teleports away, which was a bunch of BULLSHIT. Then she randomly finds it in the Wildling forest later.
To Asterâs credit, she cut down on the number of plot twists, added some callback/foreshadowing and spaced them out slightly. The first book, the last couple of chapters felt like getting punched repeatedly in the face. This time, it was like getting punched, having a couple seconds to blink and then get punched more.
What does the sword do? It controls the dreks. Remember those? Yeah, apparently Grimâs ancestor Cronan (who helped make Lightlark), turned people into mindless unstoppable monsters and the sword controls them. Another (unnamed female) ancestor cast a curse on it so it couldnât be used by the Nightshade ruling line. The dreks having been coming out a crevasse in Nightshade and Grim is the only thing holding them back from destroying it and the rest of the world. Okay.
Toward the end when itâs almost arrived at the point where Grim is going to attack Lightlark, Isla finds out that all of her people are gone. Grim kidnapped them. This is literally laughable, I canât take it seriously at ALL. He kidnapped an ENTIRE nation in a single night. The logistical nightmare. Isla finally tugs on her necklace he gave her to summon him and heâs like âyou got my note :Dâ about kidnapping her people and then is confused when sheâs mad and doesnât want to join the dark side.
This book tried to gaslight me in the last ~20% that I like Grim and that heâs both a villain and not evil. I refuse to let it gaslight me. Bro tries to pull the fact they made a (verbal and vague) agreement to trade that this justifies his actions, which includes removing the memories of Wildlings ridden with guilt of cannibalism (but donât worry, they consented to it. UNLIKE ISLA).
âWe made a dealâŠ.remember? Wildling help with nightbane, in exchange for a very vague assortment of whatever your people needed.â (80%)
Isla accuses him of sending the dreks to Lightlark and he tells her that was a coincidence. He then explains that he doesnât want to slaughter Lightlark like how he explicitly did in his message and illusion showing death and destruction.
âConsider this a warning,â [Grimâs voice] said. âA glimpse at the future. You have one month to vacate the island. In thirty days, I am coming to destroy it.â Shouts. Screams. âNothing will be left. You can choose to flee to your newlands . . . or join me in a new future. The choice is simple. Fighting is futile. The ruin coming is inevitable.â (36%)
No! Grim is innocent! There was just a series of events that coincided with his messages that unintentionally came off much more threatening than he intented. Whoopsies heâs just bad at communication. I am astounded. YOU CANT FUCKING DO THAT 80 FUCKING PERCENT INTO THE BOOK WHERE NOTHING. FUCKIN. HAPPENNNNEDDDDDDDDDD
If this was supposed to be a major twist, there *clap* needed *clap* to *clap* be *clap* BUILD UPPPP and have them question the inconsistencies
At some point in another flashback, Grim goes from dropping crazy lore about his dad to crazy lore that they live in a pocket dimension and other worlds exist. Absolutely fucking wild thing to drop and have no one go âwow thatâs earthshattering information!â Anyway.
Thereâs the battle. Itâs whatever. Oro is about to kill Grim when he tells them that 1) his life and hers is tied and 2) theyâre married. Theyâve been married the whole time. What. I was spoiled by this because I read reviews of these books before I read them and it still caught me off guard. Grim thinks that the other world can revive the dead (which is why Cleo joined his forces) and can save her because apparently sheâs on a time limit since she technically died.
You guys remember her vision of death and destruction caused by Grim? That was a memory. Of her causing death and destruction. THIS ENTIRE FUCKING PLOT WAS BASED ON HER BEING THE MOST INCOMPETENT HUMAN ALIVE.
Hereâs what happened: more dreks than ever were attacking a nightshade village, Grim will die fighting them yadda yadda and Isla teleports there via Love and unleashes her nightshade powers, killing not only the dreks but the villagers, including children, and reducing it to a wasteland. She also died. WHAT
Her memories are completely chronological except for this one little scene which she thinks is a vision and everyone else went âyeah that seems legitâ despite seeing the future being something that only an oracle can do (I think). I assumed it was a Flair that nobody acknowledged but it turns out her Flair is breaking curses. Okay. Sure. Whatever. Is this an idiot plot? I donât think it technically counts, but honestly with the end painting it as if there were a series of miscommunications from Grim and Isla, I feel like it could constitute as one. It actually made me so mad.
Isla is like âIâm a monster donât touch meâ when Oro tries to comfort her. She ends up leaving Lightlark with Grim and thatâs how it ends.
Final thoughts
I need to wrap this up because at this point Iâve been putting far more effort into this than a paper for my final and a proposal for my senior thesis (that I havenât started).
Much like Lightlark, Nightbane was A Book For Sure. I didnât drag myself through it like I did with the first, but it is so meandering. Thereâs times when you and the characters need to breathe, but this is just slow. There's so much nothing. Just like Lightlark, it feels a bit aimless and urgentless even when weâre told that important things are going to happen.
Was Nightbane better than Lightlark? Not really. Is it worse? Not really. Itâs bad for sure.
Thereâs the obvious things like âGrim is a giant creep and needs a restraining orderâ and the most well developed characters have as much depth as a paper plate. The plot twists are never meant for you to go âoh that finally clicks!â itâs meant to hit upside the head with a baseball bat, declaring that they live in a pocket dimension and then move on. What stands out the most for me this time around is the wasted potential.
The thing is that if you have a good and well-written story, it is easy to overlook its flaws in worldbuilding, characters, etc. When you donât, they only stand out more. Thereâs a reason why I get really excited when someone leaves a comment praising my prose/writing on a craft level. Anyone can come up with a good/interesting idea. Writing it well is something else entirely.
Part of what stumps me about books like this is that I fundamentally donât understand why some authors are content to produce stories that require you to turn off your brain to enjoy and donât seem to want to polish their skills and writing. I totally understand the appeal of this kind story, it can be fun and low-stakes. I read fanfiction, it would be hypocritical of me if I said I didnât enjoy that kind of thing. But the sheer volume and popularity of books like this baffles me.
If I ever write a book I want published, I want it to be thought-provoking, I want it to say something. I donât understand authors who are cool with just copy-pasting each otherâs enemies-to-lovers love triangle where the obvious choice is the brooding âmorally grayâ 6â9â emo man with a veneer of âgovernment/elite badâ fantasy that accidentally feds into the very system itâs trying to critique.
I am very much the wrong audience for this series, so truly I shouldnât be here writing 13k words dunking on it when I should be working on a thesis proposal. Or maybe my own writing. But I do believe that engaging with book like this helps me better understand what I want in my own work and illustrate what I should avoiding doing and why.
one of my degrees is in statistics, so here's some fun numbers for you, all pulled from AO3
total number of twilight fanfics: 18790
date of oldest posted twilight fanfic: 19 July 2008
mean number of twilight fanfics posted per year to date: 1105
total number of twilight fanfics tagged Canon Rewrite: 104
date of oldest posted Canon Rewrite twilight fanfic: 22 September 2013
mean number of Canon Rewrite twilight fanfics posted per year to date: 8.7
years for a Canon Rewrite twilight fanfic to appear: ~5
percentage of Canon Rewrite twilight fanfic in total numbers: 0.5%
percentage of Canon Rewrite twilight fanfic in yearly average: 0.8%
total number of ACOTAR fanfics: 13304
date of oldest posted ACOTAR fanfic: 14 July 2015
mean number of ACOTAR fanfics posted per year to date: 1330
total number of ACOTAR fanfics tagged Canon Rewrite: 53
date of oldest posted Canon Rewrite ACOTAR fanfic: 14 August 2017
mean number of Canon Rewrite ACOTAR fanfics posted per year to date: 6.6
years for a Canon Rewrite ACOTAR fanfic to appear: ~2
percentage of Canon Rewrite ACOTAR fanfic in total numbers: 0.3%
percentage of Canon Rewrite ACOTAR fanfic in yearly average: 0.5%
total number of lightlark fanfics: 47
date of oldest posted lightlark fanfic: 4 October 2022
mean number of lightlark fanfics posted per year to date: 15.7
total number of lightlark fanfics tagged Canon Rewrite: 5
date of oldest posted Canon Rewrite lightlark fanfic: 25 June 2023
mean number of Canon Rewrite lightlark fanfics posted per year to date: 2.5
years for a Canon Rewrite lightlark fanfic to appear: <1
percentage of Canon Rewrite lightlark fanfic in total numbers: 10.6%
percentage of Canon Rewrite lightlark fanfic in yearly average: 16%
a pretty firm measure of a media property's success is how much its fans engage with it - not just buying the books but thinking about the characters and the setting, and engaging in transformative art using the piece of media as a canvas. by this measure, compared to one of its forerunners and one of its closer contemporaries, lightlark is an abject, objective failure. practically no one is writing lightlark fanfic, and the few people who are seem to be more engaged by trying to rewrite it than by playing around in canon. even Powerless, released closer to Lightlark than ACOTAR, has 41 fanfictions with ZERO works tagged as Canon Rewrite and only three that appear if one searches "rewrite" outside of the tags - and only one of those is a rewrite of the entire story, and not just an expansion of a specific scene.
look, if you like lightlark, i... question your taste and judgment, but ultimately i can't do anything about it. but i'd encourage you to question why you like lightlark. what is it about the series that grabs you? do you think about it after you put the book down, or does it slide from your mind as soon as you close the last page? and if it's the latter, does that really mean you like it?
wouldn't you rather have something that makes you think rather than something that lets you turn your brain off?



