I actually bought this series for my mom several years back because I thought it sounded like her cup of tea, but I just now got around to trying it myself. I have long liked Kathy Tyers as a person and enjoyed reading her chunky stand-alone scifi book "Shivering World" back in 2021, so I was excited to read her series. As with Shivering World, her writing drew me in immediately. She just seems to have a knack for starting in the right place to quickly establish who the main character is and help me relate to them fast. This was very important because most of Firebird's family made me want to punch them in the nose.😛 I say this because everyone but her oldest sister had completely accepted the cultural norm of insisting that all "wasteling" (third born) children must die off and I was just really mad at them, but this was intentional because we as readers are not meant to be okay with it.
Honestly, while I'm not saying that as a critique of the story because the author handled things well, this is the only reason why I gave this book 4 stars instead of 5, because I typically don't like reading things that touch on the topic of suicide. It can really bother me to read characters thoughts when they're thinking about death by their own hand, and I especially don't like scene of sucide, and this book had both. (See content advisory for details.) The only reason it didn't get me upset was A) I paired the physical book with the audiobook to get past the parts that were bothering me faster, B) It's pretty obvious that this series is about Firebird, so she had to survive in order to be in the rest of the books, and C) I know this author's style and faith well enough to trust her. Once it got past the scene where Firebird attempted suicide to avoid military capture and she started to change her mentality to one of seeking life, not death, I was okay and was able to more freely enjoy the rest of the book. It was just those first few chapters I wasn't enjoying so much due to my own sensitivities.
Speaking of the rest of the book, I really did enjoy the rest. I'm in a scifi reading mood right now and this scratched that itch in a very satisfactory manner. You can tell the world in which the story is set was heavily influenced by Star Wars (one of the characters is basically a Jedi, except there's a unique explanation for his powers that goes with this unique world), so if you enjoy the feel of Star Wars, you're probably going to like this book, too. Our second main character, Brennan (the guy who's a Jedi, but not a Jedi :P) was very likable. I loved his strong faith in God and how much he values life. He was also very brave, kind, and selfless. His dynamic with Firebird was great and I loved how slow and natural their relationship felt. It really felt like two people getting to know each other and fall in love in a very natural, realistic way.
The story itself was very engaging, too. I'm definitely invested in this galactic conflict and looking forward to how everything works out with this series! So much so that I'm going to jump straight into the second book now!
Highly recommended to lovers of the vibe of Star Wars (but with Christian faith content) and scifi in general.
Content Advisory:
This is adult scifi, but I feel that it's appropriate for teen readers as well.
TRIGGER WARNING for SUICIDE: As the book's synopsis and my review states, the culture in which Firebird is born does not value the lives of children who are the third born in their families. They consider these children "wastelings". Because of an insurrection that happened many years ago where a third born royal who was so popular with the people they tried to take over the throne, the planet has since tried to prevent this from happening again by requiring all "wastelings" to commit suicide once the heir of their family has married and had enough children to secure the throne (or whatever other office their family holds). One option is to die in battle so they can earn "bliss" in the afterlife, but if not battle, they're still expected to die, either by their own hand or by submitting themselves to a firing squad. Readers who are sensitive to the topic of suicide may wish to approach this book with caution because of all the talk and thought of death and killing oneself that goes on. The talk is never graphic and I'll say right here that Firebird ends up valuing her life by the end of the book, but in the beginning she's been brainwashed by her culture into accepting her fate and thinking about her own death a lot. When she's about to go into battle, her own mother gives her a packet of poison so that if Firebird gets captured she can end her life rather than be interrogated. (Her mother later commits suicide via poison herself, which is not described at all.)
When Firebird does get captured soon after that, there's a scene that shows things from her perspective when she swallows the poison. Sensitive readers may wish to skip this. Scifi technology saves her life, though, and her captors are actually good people who fight with her to choose to live because there is a God who loves her and wants her to live for Him, not just die for Him like her false gods wanted.
Language:
None.
Sexual/Romance:
A romance blooms very slowly between Firebird and a man. They occasionally notice each other's handsomeness/beauty but they don't obsess over looks. They hold each other a couple of times and share two or three kisses that are described in emotional terms rather than physical.
There is talk of a fictional concept called "pair bonding" in which a telepathic race can basically bond to each other on a near spiritual level when they marry so that they feel each other's emotions deeply.
Violence:
This book features typical sci-fi action violence that is very reminiscent of what one sees in Star Wars movies. Lasers get fired a lot and people get shot and killed with them, but deaths are never described, nor are they bloody. Someone is implied to be killed in a fiery explosion. Another person is killed with sound waves. (A character sees video of this person in distress and then they fall over dead. Nothing yucky is described, but it's stated that the sound waves burst the blood vessels in that person's brain.)There's talk of a machine that vaporizes people painfully, but this never actually happens. It is suspected that Firebird's middle sister may have smothered a baby to death once. (Not described.)
Drug/Alcohol
On three separate occasions, Firebird (who has a phobia of needles, so some of her anxiety gets described) gets injected with a serum that temporarily makes people hypersensitive to all stimuli. This is a punishment since it makes everything too loud, bright, painful, etc. We only have her perspective while under the influence of this drug once, though. She experiences a lot more fear about what might happen when it's in her system than anything actually awful happening.
Spiritual/Magical:
This is Christian fiction, so there are characters who believe in and talk about the Christian God and faith. At the beginning of the story, Firebird and her people believe in false gods called "The Powers" who seemingly require them to live (and die) a certain way in order to earn "bliss" but it seems more like it's their government that truly requires these things. Firebird later comes to believe in the true God.
The author states in her note at the end of the book that this story investigates the "what if" question of "what would it look like if the Messiah came during the age of space travel? So, this book is actually set in a fictional world before the coming of the Christ figure. The characters are still looking forward to His coming the way the Jewish people did in the Old Testament of the Bible.
This story is science fiction, but has a Star Wars-like feel because there are characters who are very similar to Jedi. In Star Wars the Jedi have supernatural power in using the Force, and the Force is a spiritual concept instead of a scientific one. This book's Jedi-like characters are different because while their powers resemble Force wielding on a surface level, they have a scientific basis, not a spiritual one. These characters are genetically-altered humans who have been given telepathic powers through fictional science methods. They can feel people's emotions, see their memories, make things float, and carry lightsaber-like weapons, but it's all based in a part of their brain that was altered to let them do this. There is no Force in this world and you also don't find the spiritual dualism here that you find in Star Wars.