Book Review: Firelight by Sophie Jordan
- Paola Santana
- Mar 25
- 3 min read
Updated: May 31

A hidden truth. Mortal enemies. Doomed love.
Marked as special at an early age, Jacinda knows her every move is watched. But she longs for freedom to make her own choices. When she breaks the most sacred tenet among her kind, she nearly pays with her life. Until a beautiful stranger saves her. A stranger who was sent to hunt those like her. For Jacinda is a draki—a descendant of dragons whose greatest defense is her secret ability to shift into human form. Forced to flee into the mortal world with her family, Jacinda struggles to adapt to her new surroundings. The only bright light is Will. Gorgeous, elusive Will who stirs her inner draki to life. Although she is irresistibly drawn to him, Jacinda knows Will's dark secret: he and his family are hunters. She should avoid him at all costs. But her inner draki is slowly slipping away - if it dies she will be left as a human forever. She'll do anything to prevent that. Even if it means getting closer to her most dangerous enemy. (Goodreads)
BOOK SPECS:
Number of pages: 323
Format: Paperback
Genre: YA Romantasy, Paranormal Romance
Tropes: Dragons, Forbidden Love, Enemy to Lovers
SHORT REVIEW:
I did enjoy reading this book. Why? Two words: THE PLOT. I am a sucker for good drama and at the end of Firelight another secret comes to light. Major cliffhanger! I needed to know how that came to be and was instantly trying to find reviews of the second book, Vanish, to satiate my curiosity.
HEART RATE:

SMUT SCORE:

FULL REVIEW:
Firelight is the book with 'that cover'. Yeap! The one that just makes you pick it up and take it straight to the till. Hell! I wanted the book just because the cover made me curious.
Plot & Writing
This YA novel had me hooked within the first few pages. I was so engrossed in the story that, before I realised, I had read through the first five chapters. But now I find myself sitting on the fence about it.
While Jordan's writing is very captivating and she manages to make you feel like you are right in the middle of the action without overwriting the scene, I walked away from Firelight feeling that she had this amazing plot... But then decided to go about it in a really strange way. **scratches head**
Ok. I know what you're thinking: 'this is a story about dragons that turn into humans, for crying out loud! How on earth could it not be strange?' See... It's all in the little details for me. There is fiction; and then there is fiction that makes you believe it could be real. Firelight is the former. The frustrating thing is that the plot concept is good enough to be the latter, but the way the story is delivered just made me feel like something was missing. I just couldn't make sense of certain scenes.
Characters
None of the characters managed to elicit my sympathy - Jacinda's inner chatter becomes so repetitive halfway through the book that you end up not really caring; and all the characters are so selfish that the small demonstrations of affection are not strong enough to make you believe it. The book's time scale also went straight over my head. It kind of made me think of another book I reviewed - Nightshade (read the review here).
Don't even get me started on how often you read the name 'Jacinda'! I can only guess Jordan really likes the sound of if or that she repeats it so much for some other reason. Surely someone close to the girl would have given her a nickname, no?
Romance & Smut Score
While there are no explicit sex scenes, there are plenty of hot snogs. Sophie Jordan also writers adult romance, so her YA novels always have a little more spice than your regular clean YA.
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