![]() However, the ending of that book pretty much redeemed the story as Opal finally confronted the Great Dragon of Korea, and an epic showdown of dragons and the city of DFZ ensued. Unfortunately for this review to be meaningful, I would need to mention a few details from the previous books which could be minor spoilers.Īdmittedly, I caught a slight stumble in the prior sequel, Part-Time Gods, where I was quite annoyed at Opal Yong-Ae, our main protagonist, as she was increasingly backed into a corner with her bad luck curse (from her dad, of all people) and started being all kinds of crazy. The DFZ trilogy, and in particular this concluding book, was no exception. ![]() Ever since I’ve finished Heartstrikers and then the Eli Monpress series, she has become my go-to favourite author for the best comfort reads that could amaze me with its awesome worldbuilding, great and compelling characters that just feel right somehow. ![]() I don’t know how she keeps doing it, but Rachel Aaron has done it yet again. ![]() ![]() Night Shift Dragons delivered a spectacular and hugely emotionally satisfying conclusion to Rachel Aaron’s follow-up urban fantasy series set in the insanely cool, quirky and vibrant free city of the DFZ. Published: 5th May 2020 (Aaron/Bach, self-published) ![]()
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