A review by hollyblack56
We Hunt the Flame by Hafsah Faizal

adventurous dark emotional medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

Highly recommend this book! 
It is a wonderfully written book set in a world that took me a couple of chapters to understand but developed into something magical and fascinating. 
Glossary and maps are very useful to accompany you in your read! It was a welcomed refreshment from the overly western looking worlds that fantasy books tend to be set in. But then that might be my biased from the reads I've accrued... This book is definitely welcoming me into arabic folkore and imagery and I am all for it.

Characters and plot both sustain the test of logic which I am grateful for. Character  personalities and complexities are interesting and really nicely woven into the plot. A coupl  of characters felt maybe more surface level and functional than actual ones I would carry in my mind beyond the book end but thats ok. I enjoyed how a character like Yasmin who appears only in a handful of chapters is actually peppered throughout the book as Zafira thinks of her often and imagines her reaction to her adventrues, so we get second hand Yasmin personality which I enjoy. Characters often had a rich life before main plot begins and it is only fair that they call back to that life during their new turmoils.
Plot twists are clever and once again, they make sense! They aren't there just for show wotha convolutated explaination. 
Death scene(s?) are gut ranching.

The romance is also sweet and incredibly slow burn (but there is a reason for it, the author isn't just dragging it along to our benefit).
Have I said it's beautifully written? because it really is.

Looking forward to book 2. I have come to believe the best stories are 2 books long. its complexe enough to built strong characters and an interesting world. But they don't allow for enough twists and turns and non sensical betrayals to make my eyes roll because the author is on book 4 and is running out of steam and deviating really far from what I originally enjoyed about the story.
Examples of excellent duologies
A dark Window by Rachel Gillig
Radiance by Grace Draven
A river enchanted by Rebecca Ross