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The Godfather meets The Magicians in the sweeping adult debut from #1 New York Times bestselling author Marie Lu. Perfect for fans of V.E. Schwab, Red City is a dark and deadly contemporary fantasy of magical warfare, star-crossed ambition, and the pursuit of perfection at any cost, set in a glittering alternate Los Angeles.

Alchemy is the hidden art of transformation. An exclusive power wielded by crime syndicates that market it to the world’s elites in the form of sand, a drug that enhances those who take it into a more perfect version of themselves: more beautiful, more charismatic, simply more.

Among the gleaming skyscrapers and rolling foothills of Angel City, alchemy is controlled by two rival syndicates. For years, Grand Central and Lumines have been balanced on a razor’s edge between polite negotiation and outright violence. But when two childhood friends step into that delicate equation, the city―and the paths of their lives―will be irrevocably transformed.

The daughter of a poor single mother, Sam would do anything to claw her way into the ranks of Grand Central in search of a better life. Plucked away from his family as a boy to become a Lumines apprentice, Ari is one of the syndicates' brightest rising stars. Once, they might have loved each other. But as the two alchemists face off across opposite sides of an ever-escalating conflict, ambition becomes power, loyalty becomes lies, and no transformation may be perfect enough for them both to survive the coming war.

420 pages, Hardcover

First published October 14, 2025

1417 people are currently reading
62285 people want to read

About the author

Marie Lu

51 books136k followers
Hi there! I'm an author of mostly sci-fi/fantasy YA novels, like Legend, Warcross, The Young Elites, Skyhunter, and Stars & Smoke. My adult fantasy debut, Red City, releases this October 14, 2025.

I graduated from the University of Southern California and currently live in LA with my family. Before becoming a full-time writer, I was an Art Director at a video game company. Now I spend most of my time writing, trying to keep my plants alive, and getting stuck in traffic. I feel very honored that I get to tell you stories, and my deepest wish is always that my books can offer you some joy, solace, entertainment, and/or escape. With all my heart, thank you for reading.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,896 reviews
Profile Image for Emily May.
2,223 reviews321k followers
September 9, 2025
Sorry but, try as I might, I could not get into this book. And I really did try. There were moments when the story picked up for a chapter and I was like "Okay, this is it. I'm engaged." and then it would go back to being so slow and dry.

Marie Lu has created an alternative Los Angeles where war rages between rival alchemist syndicates. At the centre of this conflict is "sand" — a drug that makes the user more beautiful, more charismatic, more perfect. We follow two characters — Sam and Ari — from childhood where they are classmates into adulthood as they climb the ranks in their opposing syndicates. The premise shows potential but when it came down to it I found there was very little I actually cared about.

I see that some other reviewers said this book started slow, which it does, but I'm genuinely not sure at what point it stopped being slow for others. If I hadn't been reading an arc I would have quit.

We creep through their childhoods with lots of listening, learning and pre-training, where almost nothing happens except Sam and Ari exchanging flowery notes. Then they get older and there's a bit of mafia action (snore) before we introduce some more romantic angst by having them both begin relationships with other people. This felt like so much filler and wasted time because, come on, we all know that's not the end game, right?

Also, I feel like Ari was a much bigger barrier to my enjoyment than Sam. Any moment when I became vaguely interested was during Sam's pov, and I especially enjoyed the portrayal of the complicated messy relationship with her mother, Connie. I actually think this was by far the most interesting thing the story had to offer. But who the heck even was Ari? So beautiful, so charismatic (allegedly), but I couldn't care less about a pretty face and that charisma was not coming through these pages. His good looks seem to be his whole personality.

But even Sam's slightly more engaging perspective could not carry the book for me. I grew increasingly indifferent to her as well, especially once her relationship with Will began (for the reasons noted above).

And I cannot shake the feeling that no matter how much alchemy and gang warfare goes on, this is all just window dressing for what is, at its core, a romance. None of it feels particularly serious. Everything that happens feels like filler to delay Sam and Ari being together. That's just the impression I got. Who knows? I hope I'm wrong. Maybe this will go West Side Story on us in book two. Let me know.
Profile Image for Smitty1423.
86 reviews12.1k followers
December 9, 2025
“Fall off the bone good” is generally not a phrase used for books but I’m using it for this one. Only thing is I have to wait awhile for book 2. So so good

Tendernism

5/5
Profile Image for Tori.
113 reviews1,846 followers
October 10, 2025
Ohhh my god 😭 I’m speechless. I want to buy copies of this book and just throw them at random people. I want to send flowers to Marie Lu, her editor, and her agent. No words right now, just mark your calendars for Oct. 14th. Next week, put this on hold at your library or go to your local bookstore. If your bookstore doesn’t have it in stock, just stand there until they do. Do whatever you need to and get this book.
Profile Image for Jaime Fok.
245 reviews3,245 followers
November 2, 2025
Give me MORE immediately!

LOVED this world, and how the alchemy didn’t just act as a magic system, but was so embedded in the history and politics and development of everything.

The CHARACTERS? I definitely felt more connected with Sam vs Ari, but I truly felt for her in the way that she emotionally had to process the things she was forced to do. And don’t get me started on her relationship with her mother 😭

It’s a story about morally grey characters all around. Marie Lu truly makes you feel for every single character, good or bad.

I’m so invested. Not so patiently waiting for more!
Profile Image for kitkat (semi-hiatus ♡︎).
314 reviews917 followers
May 12, 2025
✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✧
ೀ. arc review

⊰࿐ my thoughts
━━━━⊱⋆⊰━━━━
i’m honestly having mixed emotions after finishing this book. on one hand, i really loved it. the writing style was just so unique, and unlike anything i’ve read before. the beginning is slow, and when i mean slow, i mean very slow. there were points where i was questioning the amount of time that was passing, especially near the start of the book. it does pick up, and by the end of the book, it’s pretty fast paced. in a way, it almost reminds me of a mafia style babel by r.f. kuang with more of a romantically focused plot.

the romance itself was okay. i wasn’t able to really connect to the characters that much, so i was having trouble with the idea of ari and sam’s relationship (if you can call it that). sam and ari have been friends since their childhood. ari has always gotten attention from people, even when he doesn’t want it, while sam is excellent at going unnoticed. ari is the first person who truly sees sam, and they start exchanging notes at school. they talk about everything together, everything but their home lives. given the fact that we are only given a snippet of these notes, and they really don’t interact as much when they become alchemists, it’s hard to find chemistry between the two of them. i almost wanted to see sam end up with will instead of ari.

you know those books that somehow manage to shift your entire perspective on life? this is one of those books. the writing is just so beautiful and i was so disappointed when i reached the end. sometimes i read fantasy books primarily for the romance, but the political plot was solid better than the romance in this book, and i was completely and wholly invested. as i mentioned earlier, the beginning is slow, but it speeds up as it goes on. that cliffhanger… i have no words right now.


⊰࿐ features
━━━━⊱⋆⊰━━━━
- childhood friends
- romance/fantasy
- syndicates
- touch her and die
- sex with characters other than the mcs
- descriptive violence/gore
- political plot
- 3rd person
- dual pov


>> thank you to netgalley and the publisher for an arc - all thoughts are my own <3

————

GUYS. i just got the arc 🥹🥹🥹 let me scream for a minute-
Profile Image for chantalsbookstuff.
1,045 reviews1,053 followers
October 12, 2025
Here we have Sam and Ari, both plucked and trained to become crime alchemists, a rare and powerful gift whispered about in secret. As they end up on opposite sides of the two biggest crime syndicates in Angel City, we watch their characters slowly unfold.

The story is told through multiple POVs, which I really enjoyed because it helps you connect with each character on a deeper level. But it's definitely a slow burn. The first half focuses more on world and character building than action and it almost feels like an extended introduction, hopefully laying the groundwork for an explosive sequel.

At this point, I wouldn’t say it’s a “can’t wait for the next-one” kind of series, but I’ll give it the benefit of the doubt. I liked the direction the story was heading, and the last few chapters really picked up as Sam faced some tough choices. I’m also hoping we get to see more of Ari and find out where the romance goes next.

Thank you NetGalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read and review this ARC.
Profile Image for Ricarda.
496 reviews320 followers
September 30, 2025
I feel like I grew up with Marie Lu's works and I remember really liking many of her YA books when I was a teen. So it's pretty convenient for me that she is releasing her adult debut now that I'm fully grown too. However, this book wasn't hitting quite the same and while I overall didn't hate it, there were just too many things that bugged me about it.

Everything about the concept of an alchemist mafia sounds intriguing to me: rival crime syndicates that secretly control the city, a drug that brings people close to perfection, people who can transform literally any material around them. If the book had actually focused on that part, I would have devoured it. But no, instead everything revolved around the complicated relationship between two characters with no personality. We follow Sam and Ari as they meet each other and as they get into contact with alchemy at a young age. They meet in school and become each other's only friend. Their entire childhood is written out in the first 30% of the book or so and everything about that was too long and not at all gripping. It didn't even serve the purpose that was probably intended, because for all the time that was spent on their childhoods, the relationship between Sam and Ari still wasn't developed very well. They barely even interact and mostly write letters to each other and somehow there's this big obsession growing out of that. They are drawn to each other because of their (never explained) gifts – Ari has charisma and pulls attention while Sam can pass unseen –, but that was not enough to base the whole story on. Their initial powers were kinda thrown out of the window as the story went on and now I remember that Sam also had superhuman memory for some reason and I keep forgetting that because it played absolutely zero role in the book.

Sam and Ari end up in rival syndicates and don't see each other for years. Both made a name for themselves and I just hated that we saw nothing about that while I had to sit through chapters upon chapters on their childhood. I understand that Marie Lu tried to show how these characters get involved with magic and crime and get dragged deeper into it as they grow older, but the pacing was very rough and the first part wasn't even an adult book because of it. It reads like a YA novel for quite some time, but later there's smut and violence and it all felt very unbalanced. Both Sam and Ari engage in sexual relationships with people who were fully grown adults who trained them when they were children, and I never knew how I was supposed to feel while reading these scenes. I guess it was to show how the syndicates use them in every way, but why was it written as smut then? What's the point in highlighting these relationships when the book is clearly trying to sell me on the whole Ari-and-Sam agenda? Two people who didn't know each other in their adult life at all, as I would like to repeat.

I don't think that the character work saved much either. I wasn't particularly interested in any perspective and I overall think that Sam and Ari's positions in their respective syndicates were way to similar. They are gifted and they have worked for years and they are somewhat close to their bosses, but they still don't burn for their employer and don't have a goal or any plan for the future at all. It's a big missed opportunity for me that the book didn't show different paths, that no main character was really morally corrupted, and that so little came of the crime syndicate setting in general. I still have no idea how they operate, because everything felt small scale and never got big. There was a whole war between syndicates going on, but it was actually just a row of singular people getting executed and the consequences of that only ever were that more singular people got executed. It felt repetitive and not a single plot point in here came as a surprise. It's such a shame that the story didn't work for me, because the groundwork was all there. The magic system might not have been the most innovative, but it was well described and interesting to read about. Especially the transmutation fights were awesome and often brutal. But overall, this book focused on all the wrong things for me and unfortunately never had me hooked because of that. 2.5 stars.

Huge thanks to NetGalley and Pan Macmillan / Tor for providing a digital arc in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Robin.
623 reviews4,566 followers
October 9, 2025
love the childhood friends to strangers to enemies to almost lovers. love how destroying the thing you sought to become isn’t as easy as it seems and until you can only fall back into your past and continue the cycle

this bloody, gritty urban fantasy has a visceral edge i haven’t encountered in fantasy in quite some time. a magic system that turns everyday surroundings into a potential weapon in a twisted world of alchemy & clashing syndicates

perfect for fans of the bone season and jade city

“You are my heart. If you die, I die.”

thank you to edelweiss and the publisher for providing an advance review copy. full review to come

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Profile Image for Mai ༊*·˚.
243 reviews120 followers
September 17, 2025
4.75 ★— Having grown up with Marie Lu’s YA novels on my shelf as a preteen in the 2010s, reading her adult debut Red City felt like a weird full circle moment for me.

I’m so happy to say that I really, really loved this book. I was fully entranced while reading — it drew me in and didn’t let go until the end.

Though set in a darker, dystopian and fantastical version of our world, Red City explores themes that are still very raw and grounded.

Story
The story centers around two main characters, Ari and Sam, who we first meet as children, each facing very different challenges shaped by their respective cultural backgrounds and circumstances.

Ari, growing up in India, is recruited at a young age into the Lumines — a powerful alchemist group — after his immense magical potential is discovered. His family is facing poverty, and he’s offered a life-changing opportunity: to leave everything behind and train abroad, in exchange for steady financial support sent back to them. The cost is steep. He is forced to abandon his language, his home, and the very foundation of his identity.

Sam has grown up in Angel City (a dystopian version of LA) from infancy, as the daughter of a single mother, who immigrated from China as an adult. Her mother does everything she can to support her on limited means. Sam’s secret fascination with alchemy and a moment of desperation, leads her to seek out Grand Central, an alchemist group that rivals the Lumines. She, too, is drawn into their hidden world of power and secrets, where learning to fight and survive suddenly means stability and safety for herself and her mother.

Both attending the same school, Ari and Sam slowly build a quiet, deeply felt friendship. They share an understanding of what it means to feel out of place — both alienated by their upbringing, their burdens, and through their cultural identities. But they hide their alchemist affiliations from one another, and as they grow into adulthood, they both grapple with the difficulties of their choices and their lives as members of their respective alchemist groups.

Themes
This book hit so many themes, and it hit them hard.

Marie Lu writes the immigrant (and first-generation immigrant) experience with an honesty and emotional weight that floored me. Ari is uprooted, cut off from his family, his language, his country and placed into an environment where assimilation and excellence are expected in return for his survival. Sam, on the other hand, exists in-between: trying to navigate a fraught relationship with her mother, shaped by the pressure of trying to meet her mother’s expectations, while navigating a society that rarely sees her.

Both of them are driven by love for their families, and that love is complicated, precisely because it’s wrapped up in obligation, guilt, and the desperate need to succeed for their family’s sake. There’s a quiet heartbreak in all of it, especially in how both characters are forced to mature too quickly.

Ari and Sam often feel like outsiders — not just because of the powers they’re developing, but because of their aforementioned cultural backgrounds and their own grappling with them. Their relationship is formed through shared experiences, mutual protectiveness, and emotional understanding. It was beautiful to see it develop.

My one small gripe with this book is that I wished we had seen more of Sam and Ari together on the page, during their formative years. While I completely understand that much of their connection is built on shared circumstances, hidden lives, and emotional parallels, I did feel like their bond could have used just a bit more time to breathe. The intensity of their feelings in adulthood makes sense thematically, but I personally would’ve connected to it even more with a few extra scenes deepening that foundation between them.

Still, there is so much to unpack in this book (more than I can expand upon in a review). It’s rich, layered, deeply introspective and (to me) achingly relatable.

The Fantasy
The fantasy elements are incredibly well done. The alchemical magical system is introduced gradually and organically. We learn about the world of alchemy as Sam and Ari do, which made the immersion feel natural and never overwhelming. It struck a great balance between detailed, while still being engaging.

In turn, the fight scenes involving characters who used alchemy were sharp, creative, and grounded in the character dynamics. I loved that alchemy wasn’t just flashy magic, but a structured, complex and layered system that felt well-thought-out and intricate.

And Angel City is such an intriguing backdrop! It’s gritty, dangerous, and layered with syndicate tensions that feel just as grounded as they do fantastical. It’s the kind of world you can see and feel while reading, thanks to the author’s cinematic and immersive writing.

Final Thoughts
Red City is one of those rare fantasy books that hits on every level. It’s emotional, thematic, and just straight-up cool. It has a cinematic, high-stakes feel, but it’s also deeply personal and thoughtful in ways that surprised me.

If you’re into character-driven fantasy that isn’t afraid to dig deep — into identity, family, power, and everything in between — this one’s going to stick with you. It definitely stuck with me (and will probably stick with me for a while.)

[EDIT: Sept. 17, 2025 - I luckily got an advance copy of the audiobook courtesy of Macmillan Audio.
You can find a review of it here. It was unsurprisingly fantastic!
]

_____________________________

Thank you to NetGalley and Tor Publishing Group for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Andy ₊✩‧₊˚౨ৎ˚₊✩‧₊.
114 reviews56 followers
December 17, 2025
3⭐️

Unique story , great characters and good spice…. It was all in here BUT why this wasn’t my vibe is a small mystery 🤷‍♀️.

First 120 pages - pure torture. It was slower than slow and I kept falling asleep. Then it picked up and I have to say I was entered but I still felt detached from the story.
Profile Image for jenny reads a lot.
695 reviews846 followers
November 5, 2025
I couldn’t decide which love interest I wanted to root for & which syndicate I wanted to join and I didn’t want it to end!

I’m pretty picky when it comes to urban fantasy, so I tend to avoid it for the most part - but a number of friends read and raved about Red City and I knew I needed to give it a try. I am SO FREAKING GLAD I DID!

I really like when I can’t tell what time period/decade a modern book takes place in - Was it the 90s? the 2010s? who knows! It makes the book feel timeless and takes away the sting of “modern” for those (me, I am that person) who don’t like urban/modern settings as much.

This is action-packed with really cool fight scenes that were both easy to follow, and cinematic.

The tension is top tier, the spice feels essential and well placed, and the characters jump off the page and into your heart! The magic, alchemy, is familiar, but its execution is anything but!

🌶️- 3ish open door scenes, not super detailed.

Audio Narration: 4/5 Great pacing, pausing, inflection. Each narrator fit the character well. Voice variation for characters (within each narrators section) was good.

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Thank you Macmillan Audio for the gifted book. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Booksblabbering || Cait❣️.
2,024 reviews792 followers
November 22, 2025
This is so addictive?!!!
Romeo and Juliet, magical alchemy secret society edition.

Sam has an unquenchable thirst: this desperation to make something big of her life, to matter to someone. Driven by her mother who wants her daughter to be able to escape the life she had as an immigrant.
Plucked away from his family as a boy from India to become a Lumines apprentice, Ari is one of the syndicates' brightest rising stars.

Neither one knows that after their childhood friendship, they will find themselves back in each other’s lives in enemy syndicates.

So, a dystopian LA where alchemy is used in very different forms to kill, influence, torture, drug….
Magic that requires pain to transform…
Childhood friends to enemies…
A heartbreaking backstory and drive from both main characters….

Love is alchemy. It is the belief that your time spent with this person is better than your time spent without them. Like alchemy at its worst, loving the wrong person can destroy you, piece by piece, until you are nothing but ash. And like alchemy at its finest, finding your soulmate can remake you, elevate you to your most perfect state.

If you’ve been following my reviews for a while, you know I usually skip steamy scenes. Marie Lu put CRACK in this. Woah.

It is definitely not YA, yet it was as bingeable as one. You won’t want to put it down.

There are also Easter eggs to The Kingdom of Back by Marie Lu (Mozart and his sister). Not in the sense of returning characters, but just a throwaway line. I’m probably overthinking it.

Physical arc gifted (and signed) by Tor and the author.

UPDATE: Three months on and I can’t stop thinking about this book, so soft 5 stars.🌟

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Profile Image for aeryn rose.
348 reviews1,088 followers
October 10, 2025
4.5⭐️

Wow...just, wow.
This book was incredible. Absolutely incredible.

I went into this book not expecting much, but just hoping it would be something to enjoy. This book was SO. Much more than that. The story, the characters, the magic system; it was done with the utmost care and I was hooked from the very beginning.

The characters in this book had so much to them. SO MUCH! The level of depth and history and feeling between everyone was something so unique. Sam and Ari had this kind of Romeo and Juliet relationship with them joining rival syndicates and their love was so pure even to the very end. This book is HEAVY on the theme of what you're willing to do for your family, the lengths you'd go to. I liked that we got little tidbits of the other characters POV I really do think it added that level of humility that wouldn't have been there without it

The level of storytelling this book had was incredible. I wasn't bored for a single second while reading this. I did find the pacing to be extremely weird and off, which is why I knocked down half a star. But other than that, I found very few faults. The magic system was SO UNIQUE and different from so many other fantasy books out there and it was explained in a way that made it make sense even if it felt like a lot in the beginning.

Overall, this BOTM pick was an absolute banger and this hasn't even been formally released and I NEED the next book!! I will be sitting patiently in the corner of my room sobbing while I wait for the second book. Marie Lu, I'm sending you my next therapy bill.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

𝓟𝓻𝓮-𝓡𝓮𝓪𝓭: ❤️🐉

I feel myself coming out of my book slump and if this lets me down, I will be filing a lawsuit 🤩
Profile Image for AG.
171 reviews21 followers
October 29, 2025
Huge thanks to NetGalley and Pan Macmillan for the ARC and to the wonderful Zana for the buddy read!

🌟🌟🌟/5

When I first heard of Marie Lu's adult debut, I was expecting something similar to Jade City by Fonda Lee (which I didn't manage to finish last year but did really fall in love with, but I digress). Unfortunately, this didn't quite deliver and ended up being painfully mediocre.

The Good:
● ML nailed the urban fantasy vibes. I loved the way she presented both the glamorous and the ugly parts of Angel City. The tension between the rival syndicates was fun to read.
● Between Sam and Ari, Sam's POV was far more compelling. She was fleshed out better (her fraught relationship with her mother added depth to her character). She was also significantly morally grey, which is what I wanted the characters from this book to be. Most of the interesting stuff in this book happened in her POV.
● Sam's mother Connie with only 3 chapters of POV was the best written character, probably because she's inspired by the author's own experiences, as indicated in the author's note. Her experience as an immigrant and her expectations from the country she'd entered were very well written. Hers was the story that tugged at my heartstrings.
● The setup for the romance great: No one being able to look away from Ari and no one ever actually noticing Sam. This could've been excellent, but...it did not.
● The magic system was pretty cool and for the most part, made sense (except for that one mention of plants having keratin, I really hope that's removed from the final copies. A simple Google search will tell you that they do not.) I liked how alchemists have to pay a price for the transformations they perform.


The Bad:
● Although I was invested in Sam's POV, I suffered through Ari's. His entire identity is that everyone's attracted to him, sexually or otherwise. There wasn't any nuance to his story. Even the formulaic male love interests of romantasy have a better personality (THAT'S how bad Ari was).
● This 'romance' is the one of the most unromantic things I've ever read. There was too much telling and no showing. The whole 'star-crossed lovers' thing was based on a bunch of childhood memories that inculded passing notes that, in no way, looked like they were written by seventh graders. There wasn't any room for the development of a romance and that's why the inevitable proclamations-of-undying-love-in-the-face-of-death didn't have the desired effect. For Ari, the sweetness of their teenage memories transformed into lustful thoughts about Sam and that made everything worse. So yeah, 0 stars for the romance.
● Out of all the ways in which this could've been an adult novel, I was disappointed to see Lu take the 'add a whole lot of smut and make it problematic' path. Did both protagonists need to be involved sexually with people who watched them grow up from children to adults?! This aspect of the book overpowered everything else and ultimately ruined the reading experience for me.

'Red City' was one of my most anticipated releases of 2025, but unfortunately, it did not deliver. The final quarter had me hooked to the page, but the story overall was very forgettable. I'm not sure if I'll be reading the sequel, although I do feel like the ending left the protagonists in very interesting positions of power.
Profile Image for Bailey Chadwick.
211 reviews1,365 followers
October 10, 2025
I fear I will need 7-10 business days to fully process this book and how it made me feel.

Do not skip this. Read it. It’s incredible. Godfather meets Romeo and Juliet with alchemy and very high stakes. Set in modern day Los Angeles.
Profile Image for Maeghan &#x1f98b; HIATUS on & off.
577 reviews529 followers
August 21, 2025
Huge thanks to NetGalley & the publishers for this ARC! I’m so excited 🥹. All thoughts are my own!

I want to start off by saying that there’s a lot of interesting aspects about this story - and I think it will be a win for a lot of people. I saw a lot of things coming, which didn’t alter my reading experience but the major pacing issues did. I kept snapping out of it and nothing *much* was happening.

I was underwhelmed. It made me feel like a history book I was obligated to read and not reading for fun. Around the 20% mark, I went and reread the synopsis… and I think it’s really on me but something was just missing.

The relationship between Sam and her mom was incredibly well depicted. Messy, hurtful and complicated mother-daughter relationship with a lot of generational trauma woven into it. Sam felt like a multidimensional character to me but Ari was a cardboard box. He was one dimensional and I think the story could’ve went on without his POV.

I read one of Marie Lu’s duology and I had loved it - in this one… the writing felt cold. The characters went on about everything - even while terrible things were happening - as if it wasn’t a big deal. I felt as disconnected as the characters.

It’s separated in 3 parts and I wanted to DNF in the first part so badly. I briefly got hooked in the second part when we got Connie’s POV and that made me realize that I simply didn’t care about the 2 MCs. The only highlights for me were Connie’s 2 POVs and Edward’s 1 POV.

Although marketed as adult, the writing was very YA (other than the few sex scenes). The romance between Sam & Will made me highly uncomfortable. He met her when she was 15 and they have a 9 years age gap. He tells her he wanted her for a long time and sincerely… no.

I think some aspects were well done, especially the grim-dark-depressing setting. But the story was hindered by too many things for me to fully enjoy this.
Profile Image for Bethany (Beautifully Bookish Bethany).
2,774 reviews4,686 followers
October 15, 2025
Marie Lu KILLED IT with her adult debut!! Red City is being comped to Jade City and I definitely see why, although stylistically this really feels like Lu's work, only grittier and sexier. It's like Godfather with magic and a hint of Romeo and Juliet.

This is the start of an urban fantasy series that imagines our world but with magic via alchemy, controlled by rival firms akin to the mafia. Book one is set in a city very similar to Los Angeles. Recruited as children in financially desperate straits, Sam and Ari are being secretly trained by different firms when they meet in school and develop a friendship and sort of innocent first love. But behind the scenes, they are each being indoctrinated into a painful and brutal sort of magic that will eventually require violence of both of them...

The worldbuilding is really strong and feels realistic. Sam and Ari are both manipulated by people in power and have complicated relationships with their superiors, and Sam with her mother who she is trying to protect. It's a story of power, money, deadly rivalry, and star-crossed lovers. It's a brutal world that can easily snuff out humanity and there is plenty of tragedy to be had. I absolutely loved it and cannot recommend it enough! I'm excited to see where the series goes next, especially because Lu is a seasoned writer who knows how to keep momentum and land a series ending. The audio narration is really good! They do a great job of narrating the characters at different ages and evoking a sense of the world. I received an audio review copy via NetGalley, all opinions are my own.

Profile Image for ❋Rushna❋.
340 reviews33 followers
October 9, 2025
If you enjoyed RF Kuang’s Babel and/or VE Schwab’s Vicious, you’re in for a treat. I have so much to say without spoiling anything and even that won’t convey how much I loved this❤️‍🩹

I’ve read every single book released by Marie Lu and have grown up with her works and characters since high school. Reading her adult dark fantasy debut in my twenties was a full circle moment. I. Want. More. The writing style was beautiful, gripping, and the adult themes were structured so well for a mature audience. I enjoyed every moment of this book and will be holding it close to my heart.

We’re introduced to Sam (FMC) and Ari (MMC) from when they’re young, innocent children to when they are several years older as alchemists of rival syndicates (think Babel with a mafia focus where alchemy, at the literal cost of one’s soul, is the magic system). Sam and Ari were both so well written and my heart hurt for them so much. They go through many moral dilemmas that develop their character over time with a lot of difficulty. They have so much love for each other and their own families. Of course, this impacts their decisions as they are in constant conflict between their duties and what is right. Alchemy has a cost and seeing how it gradually affects one’s literal soul and innocence to corruption was truly dark and reflective.

The other characters from the syndicates were also well introduced and intriguing. I’m used to Marie Lu’s YA works so I didn’t know if she would actually write spice in this but…whew, some of those scenes had me going🫣 No spoilers, but one particular character was the definition of a villain and yet interesting with several faults👀🤭. Since his role was so impactful to the storyline, I’m curious what their character will be like in the next book.

While the plot does have a slow start to set up the world, I wanted more moments between Sam and Ari. The progression of their relationship was well paced and full of so much angst when they meet again as enemies. I loved them together!

I also admire how Marie Lu explored the immigrant experiences of POC and the guilt that frames complex relationships between children and their immigrant parents. As a daughter of immigrant parents myself, the messaging was so powerful and truly resonated with me.

Ari struggles with the loss of his own cultural identity and being pulled from his family as he’s forced to assimilate in a Western setting. No one ever talks about it, but loss of being able to speak your own native language is mournful. Sam’s mother is a single immigrant mother who has gone through endless hardships but does her very best to raise Sam and provide for her. Sam has a complex relationship with her mother, which was so relatable. I understood her struggle to be noticed and fully communicate her feelings, while also acknowledging (but not fully knowing) the sacrifices her mother has made to ensure Sam could succeed in life.

The alchemy-based worldbuilding was so creative, well researched, and I’ll never stop thinking about it. I enjoyed the “scientific” framing of it. The fantastical and elemental aspects added more because it makes you think about the ethical cost of such power. The fight sequences had me hooked in and I was truly mesmerized with how cleverly each technique was presented.

I also enjoyed the different extracts throughout the book that came in snippets of news articles, headlines, journal entries. It made me feel truly immersed into the world with how realistic it felt. The bonus POVs were unexpected but provided MUCH context and heightened the emotional blow by the time I got to the end of this book.

A million thank yous to Tor, NetGalley, and the author for the eARC! 🥹 Eternally, eternally grateful at the opportunity to read this gem early and I cannot wait for Book 2❤️
Profile Image for mith.
930 reviews306 followers
November 26, 2025
This book is the epitome of a Pinterest board that didn't translate well onto the page.

I was being kind when I gave this book 2 stars before, because after ruminating on it (read: complaining with my bestie, with whom I buddy read this with), I realized I fucking hated this book. Which is a goddamn shame, as it usually is, because how the fuck do you mess up such a cool ass concept of an alternate-LA where alchemy reigns supreme and two mafia like groups are at war with each other? and at the center of it all are two childhood friends who never got to explore their innocent lovey dovey feelings for each other? It's a recipe for angst. It basically writes itself with how tragique coded and angst ridden it is wont to be.

AND YET. We are given this fucking mess.

I will give Miss Lu this: top tier generational trauma. That was pure agony. Of all of the pain written into this book—and, mind you, there is quite a bit—Connie and Sam's relationship is probably the most authentic to come out of it. It was raw, it was desperate, and it was both full of hope and despair and, man, oh man, is there anything so tragic as a fraught mother-daughter relationship?

That aside, the only other good thing I could think of was the alchemy itself. The logistics of it were really cool, and if I was a bit more into science, I'd like it more, too. Generally speaking, though, it set a nice stage for a "magic system."

Now for the shit show. Nearly every character besides Sam was a shit show. Ari was, like every single one of Lu's male leads, a pretty boy with no fucking substance. His main job—quite fucking literally—is to be pretty. That is his entire personality with a dash of anxiety to make him seem down to earth and somewhat relatable to the average person. I don't know and I don't give a fuck. He read like a wet cardboard box, and I don't see the appeal. His POV pissed me off every single time I got to it. Nothing pisses me off than wasted potential and lo and behold. That is quite all Ari amounts to. I'm convinced Lu doesn't really know how to write an actual male POV because her other male characters are pretty decent, but when it comes to a POV character? They have no personality. They are beautiful and charming, and I'm just supposed to believe that because it's being forced upon me every goddamn chapter. Shut up.

Next thing was the borderline grooming. Listen, I know it's an adult book, so it can get away with a lot of things, but just because it can does not mean it should. I forget how to mark things as spoilers on the app, so forgive me, but SPOILERS SPOILERS SPOILERS after this —
Both Ari AND Sam are involved with people who aren't each other throughout the course of the book. Who the fuck cares. The issue is that those people are older mentors who have power over them, and these two kids are already in a position where they're being isolated from their family/having to lie to them for their safety and monetary dependency. HOLY shit it left such a bad fucking taste in my mouth. Ruined the entire goddamn book for me.

Listen, I'm not a dark romance reader. Obviously. I hated this.

And, honestly, the more I think about it—that's the problem this godforsaken book, at its core, has: it tries so fucking hard to be something other than a romance book lol. And I SEE RIGHT THROUGH YOU. Lu def loves her romance, I can tell, and when I don't hate them, they're really good! I can get behind a couple of her ships.

No, I don't actually believe this is intended to be a romance, but lorde, it feels so obvious that Sam and Ari's primary relationship (romantic or not) is supposed to be the focus that the rest of it is almost background noise. It feels so disingenuous cause what's the point of everything else?

Like I said: I see right through you.

BUT WAIT, THERE'S MORE. The book is fucking slow. LAWD. Why did it feel like it went on FOR FUCKING EVERRRRR. It's weird cause, while some parts of it were engaging—like Sam's POV, the only times I genuinely found myself wanting to continue—the other parts of it dragged on. I know Lu can write fast-paced, action-packed books, but this one felt lackluster. Lots happened, to be sure, but I think the pace of squeezing in their teen years into a third of the book, then their intro to the alchemy mafia into another part made for an oddly paced book. The rest of it was their adult life where shit went down and things Finally Start Happening, but that beginning was kind of a mess, and it didn't fix itself as we rolled to the end.

I think I got everything down for now. Good god. I kind of wanna hate read book two only to see how it ends because I gave enough of my time seeing this through, but I'll probably have forgotten most of Red City by the time RC2 is out. (Thank god.) I think it's time Marie Lu and I part ways.

• • • • •

I have many thoughts, and a good 90% of them are scathing. If I remember, and if they are coherent enough, maybe I'll write my review this weekend. Yolo. 1.5 tho, this doesn't deserve even 2 full stars, smh.
Profile Image for hailee.
423 reviews254 followers
October 14, 2025
thank you to netgalley and the publisher for the arc. all opinions are my own.

HAPPY PUBLICATION DAY!!!!!!!!!

“They aren’t childhood friends anymore - they are enemies on opposite sides of a chasm, and tonight, there is fire burning between them.”

MARIE LU NEVER LETS ME DOWN!!!!!! if you enjoyed babel, vicious, jade city, and the cruel prince (aka some of my all time favorites), you’ll likely enjoy this book as well. if you’re curious to know the elements from each of these books that i found to be similar, read the end of this review.

red city transports us to a reimagined version of los angeles (in this case, angel city) where alchemy is the power that controls the crime syndicates. i found the magic system and the actual descriptions of alchemy in use to be very interesting - especially when sam and ari are first learning about it in the beginning.

“Maybe happiness only exists in fragments. Maybe it is only the absence of grief.”

this book is GRITTY and rough and heartbreaking and the characters, each and every one of them, are doomed by the narrative. from the start, i had a sinking feeling in my stomach that truthfully never left - i feared for these characters on every page.

marie lu tackles the experiences of immigrants, complex mother-daughter relationships, the cost of ambition, and more all within the setting of mafia crime rings and a captivating magic system.

though there are parts where the pacing dragged a bit and i wished we got to see more of sam and ari’s relationship developing as they grew up, this was still a fantastic read and i loved it!

“And somehow, beneath her horror at what she has done, she feels a hint of something else. Satisfaction, perhaps. Vengeance.”

like i said, i found red city reminiscent of the following books for these specific reasons:

- babel: immigration, characters who were torn from their home country, dealing with the loss of a place/language you slowly forget, slight dark academia vibes in the beginning
- the cruel prince: jude’s ambition and yearning to belong/become more, political intrigue
- vicious: morally gray characters, ambition and jealously and betrayal, grittiness
- jade city: warring mafias/clans and a magical substance that grants the user powers/heightened abilities
Profile Image for Esmay Rosalyne.
1,496 reviews
November 26, 2025
This review was originally published on Before We Go Blog

4.25 stars

I am not going to lie, I picked up Red City expecting a sexier and more romantic version of Fonda Lee’s Jade City, and while it kinda gives that vibe, it is also so much more than that. It’s a true gutpunch of a story that keeps peeling back layers of culture, identity, power, morality, loyalty, and love, all while showcasing the dangerous things that can happen when a person loses or sacrifices all of those things, and I love it for that. Think the magical mob rivalry of The Greenbone Saga meets the dystopian crime syndicate underworld of The Bone Season, with a touch of Romeo & Juliet-esque tragedy and a dangerous magic system with a cool-factor that is honestly criminal. Do I really need to say more?

Now, while I was initially a bit caught off-guard by the fact that Part 1 of Red City feels like one big extended prologue in which we follow our two main protagonists, Ari and Sam, as young teens, I quickly latched onto them and loved the careful set-up for the emotional rollercoaster that we were about to step into with them. Ari is a boy with magic burning in his veins who gets pulled out of his home in India by the Lumines syndicate to become their brightest rising star, while Sam has grown up struggling to make something of her life as the daughter of a poor immigrant in the grimy streets of Angel City and takes her chance by forcing her way into the Grand Central syndicate.

So, childhood friends turned strangers turned enemies turned almost (?) lovers... why yes, the tension and emotional stakes are incredibly high, and I loved seeing how Ari and Sam's lives continued to parallel and mirror each other in so many ways as they both got pulled into a world that could offer them everything they have ever dreamed of, if only they are willing to sacrifice everything that has made them who they are. Lu does such a phenomenal job of developing both sides of this mob rivalry that it's impossible to choose sides, and I loved how every time we switched perspective, I felt my own judgement and allegiance shift. There's no black/white good vs. evil, and that is exactly what makes this story feel so human.

Moreover, I really appreciated how Lu explored the themes of identity, corporate greed, inequality, trauma, and the immigrant experience through Ari and Sam's eyes, without making them empty vessels to bring home the social commentary. They are both such well fleshed-out and beautifully human characters who you can understand and root for, especially because they are both driven by a deep love for their families that feels so relatable and honest. Also, the romance is really only one example of the many complicated relationships that Ari and Sam are entangled in, and I loved how each side character was just as beautifully complex as the next. I especially enjoyed digging into the strained mother/daughter bond between Sam and Connie (whose few little POV chapters I loved!), as well as the complicated dynamic between Ari, his mentor, and his fellow apprentices at Lumines.

And yes, it sometimes frustrated and hurt me to see them taking actions that only pulled them deeper into the danger that they are so desperately trying to escape, but I also really couldn’t blame them for getting drawn in by the dangerously alluring secret world of the alchemy crime syndicates, because I was honestly just as intrigued and dazzled by it all. I mean, I haven’t read too many fantasy books with alchemy magic systems before, but Marie Lu’s take on it here just felt refreshing and unique and so damn cool to me.

The magic is somehow so simple yet so complex, and I really enjoyed learning about all its miraculous wonders and disturbing horrors together with Ari and Sam, as well as how it has embedded itself into the social structure Angel City. We get to see the many ways that it can be used to take a life, to fight, to influence, to corrupt, to torture, and to drug. And we also get to experience first-hand how it requires pain to transform, and how the use of the coveted substance Sand slowly eats away at your soul while you only become more reliant on and addicted to its powers. Like, if you enjoy magic systems that come with a high cost, then Red City is exactly your type of drug.

But as impressed as I was with how Lu balanced and interwove all the political intrigue, magic, cinematic action, and thematic exploration, I just can’t deny that I was personally mostly here for the angst and yearning between Ari and Sam. It’s so understated that you almost forget the romance is the red thread weaving this entire tragic trainwreck together, but I was honestly living for the heartache of it all. I did feel like the intensity of their feelings in their adulthood did not totally match up with the quiet bond that we got to see develop in their formative years, even if their level of emotional turmoil made sense thematically as they now find themselves pitted against each other without wanting to be.

While Red City started off a bit slow, it just crept deeper and deeper under my skin with each new brutally bold twist and turn only to leave me absolutely reeling by the end. I don’t know how I have slept on Marie Lu’s works for so long, but you better bet I am going to be diving into her YA backcatalogue while I desperately await the next instalment in The New Alchemists series. If you’re in the mood for a character-driven, gritty dystopian urban fantasy that seamlessly blends action with emotion and ruthlessly digs into power, belonging, and the quiet ache of wanting to protect the people you love even when the world keeps demanding pieces of you in return, then I can’t recommend Red City highly enough.
Profile Image for Kalena ୨୧.
893 reviews527 followers
October 17, 2025
⋆.˚✮ 5 stars ✮˚.⋆

marie lu how dare you do this to me when i will have to wait an indistinguishable amount of time until the next book's release. that was everything, characters? impeccable. setting? so cool. worldbuilding? amazing. also, i need more adult fanasty/sci-fi books right now - longer review soon!
Profile Image for Zoë.
808 reviews1,582 followers
November 6, 2025
had such a fun time crying had to wait two weeks before I could review to cool off (but I’m still crying)
Profile Image for DianaRose.
860 reviews163 followers
October 9, 2025
firstly, thank you to the publisher for an arc and an alc!

romeo and juliet meets full metal alchemist in an alchemical mobster setting

3.5 stars — i’ve seen mixed reviews from others that wish there was more from marie lu’s debut adult novel, and unfortunately i have to agree. especially after reading and loving her legend series as a teen, this debut adult novel’s plot felt a tad too long and drawn out with minimal reward.

i do however love how we see the darker side of alchemy utilized on a smaller scale — specifically torture. of course, there’s been multiple alchemy novels pubbed this fall, but none have been as horrifying on a smaller scale like red city.

as for the audio, there was dual narration and while i normally love natalie naudus, in this specific scenario her voice felt much too monotonous in comparison to her male counter part’s voice, who put emotion and energy into his narration.

regardless, i’m excited for the next novel after the events that unravelled in the last 85% of the book

——
excited to read marie lu’s debut adult alchemical novel! let’s see how many fantasy books with alchemy remind me of fma this year
Profile Image for Rachel (TheShadesofOrange).
2,887 reviews4,798 followers
September 14, 2025
4.0 Stars
This is my first time reading this author so I went in without any preconceived expectations. With that, I can say that this novel was a wonderful surprise.

I was pleased to find myself immediately pulled into the narrative from the first chapter. I was particularly intrigued by the school academia setting which felt slightly reminiscent of the Magicians.

I enjoyed the characters who felt fleshed out and likeable. I found myself caring for them, which made me invested in the overarching plot.

I would recommend this one to anyone looking for a new fantasy academia read. It was an excellent choice to read in the fall season.

Disclaimer I received a copy of this book from the publisher.
Profile Image for Sidney.
144 reviews66 followers
July 31, 2025
I don't know which I'm more upset about...the fact that life was lifing this past week so I wasn't able to devour this like I really wanted to or the fact that it's over.

this was so addictive. I can see why some people thought the beginning was slow but for me it was the perfect pace for the world building leading up to the action. After part 1 it really cranks up a notch. It's literally action until the very end. when I say action I really mean action, this was like watching two mafia "families" fighting it out, going to war or something. I loved it.

the writing was so vivid, parts of this really felt like a movie! the alchemy/magical system was something I haven't seen before. It was so well done.

I know most people were rooting for Ari & Sam but yall.....hear me out. Will, though??? ✨SHE CAN FIX HIM I PROMISE✨ I was really really hoping for a taaaad bit more of the love triangle, in the sense of Ari & Will really fighting for Sam's love. I was really rooting for her to pick will & go to the dark side like 🥵 he was really serving touch her & you die type of energy & this is the kind of energy I want.

the last like 30% had my anxiety on level 10. I didn't know what to expect, who was about to betray who, what was going to happen, but it definitely did not disappoint. I can't wait for book two & this one hasn't even hit shelves yet 😭

Thank you to NetGalley & the publisher for this arc in exchange for an honest review
Profile Image for Emily.
479 reviews1,310 followers
November 23, 2025
One of the best books I’ve read this year! I absolutely adored this book, I love the characters even if my hear hurts for them and I know in future books it will hurt even more for them! If you liked Jade City then you’ll definitely like this book!
Profile Image for Jenni ♡.
160 reviews184 followers
October 8, 2025
A raw and adrenaline-fueled descent into darkness, this is far from a simple happy tale. Marie Lu's “Red City” is an absolute masterpiece that has completely consumed my every thought. This book is my new hyper fixation.

One of the themes that was masterfully done is the complexity of childhood neglect and the desperate, often flawed, lengths a parent will go to for their child's future. As a first-born daughter of an immigrant, and now a parent myself, this part of the story resonated with me on a profoundly deep and personal level. The raw and authentic portrayal of intergenerational trauma, specifically the dynamic between Sam and her mom, Connie. It really resonated with me and had me in an emotional chokehold. Connie's point-of-view chapters are so viscerally written that they evoke a powerful, personal resonance. I just HAD to call my mom after each Connie chapter.

This book has some of the best beautifully flawed character work I’ve read. Their motivations are rational and deeply human, making their perspectives feel relatable and their choices unpredictable. Everyone has something to lose, which creates a tense and thrilling plot. We ALL have something to lose and something to live for at the end of the day.

Few things satisfy me more than a love story brimming with yearning, and Marie Lu delivers exactly that. She handles the transition from childhood friends to lovers to enemies with such care and authenticity that I felt every moment of pining and longing between these characters.

I will always devour a well-written tragic love story, and this one is now firmly on my list. It was everything I hoped for and more!! On my knees for book 2!!!

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