Many YA books have at their center a girl that could be anybody. A normal girl, one who doesn't stand out, but who has something extraordinary in her, and all it takes is the right set of circumstances for her to realize it. Blood in Iron's Kory is NOT such a girl.
Seventeen-year-old Kory is most assuredly not the kind of character that is easy to identify with unless we've been through some serious trauma. Orphaned at an early age, Kory now lives with her drug-addict mother, and who has been forced to deal drugs to her fellow high-schoolers in order to keep the electricity on. She has a rock-hard shell, exuding toughness and anger. She's coarse, crass, and will pick a fight with anyone at any time, including the jocks.
And oh, she's also a full-blooded demon-hunter known as a Ferrum.
When she has the fortune to survive an encounter with a vicious demon, her world is turned inside out. She falls in with a group of local hunters, and her training begins at the hands of the mega-hawt Rex, with whom she has an undeniable chemistry but who insists on a platonic relationship.
I really enjoyed this book. Kory is not the kind of heroine you see every day - flawed, forced to do bad things for the right reasons. Her character grows considerably over the course of the story, as she learns to set a higher standard for herself, and thanks in large part to Stein, the geeky wallflower she takes under her wing and forms a sweet friendship with.
I would have liked a little more demon-kicking action in the story, but I expect I'll get that in the next book, which I'll be moving on to without delay.