The Reading Bud

Book Blog by Heena Rathore-Pardeshi

Book Review: Lunarmancer by Jake Bennett

Book Details:

Author: Jake Bennett 
Release Date:
July 10, 2023
Series:
Genre: Young Adult, Epic Fantasy
Format: E-book 
Pages: 436 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
Reika is a changeling, a human girl brought up in a kind community of Metazoans, a sapient
zoomorphic species who migrated from a distant land long ago. She works as a servant at the
King’s citadel.
But all this changes when Reika and her friends Melito and Tabitha—royal guards
at the citadel—are attacked by rebel Metazoans led by the fearsome sorcerer Magnus. Facing
death, Reika’s true nature is revealed by the light of the full moon; a dormant power is
awakened, and Reika’s destiny changes forever.

In order to heal the darkness awoken in Reika’s soul, and to escape the machinations of
powerful foes, she will need allies. Thus begins an epic journey spanning multiple continents
and cultures, through magical and material perils, and even bending the fabric of time itself…
Lunarmancer is the debut YA fantasy-epic by Jake Bennett, a novel that marries the brilliant
ensemble casts of Kingdom Hearts and Final Fantasy with Tolkien’s luscious world-building.

Review

Rating: 4.5 out of 5.

Lunarmancer by Jake Bennett is a sweeping, richly imagined fantasy epic that blends classic genre tropes like magic academies, prophecies, chosen ones, with a surprisingly intimate emotional core. What begins as a tale of self-discovery rapidly unfolds into a sprawling, multi-threaded saga of war, identity, loss, and resilience.

At the heart of it is Reika, a former servant girl grappling with a curse that transforms her into somethign she never imagined. Her journey is full of pain, sacrifice, and moments of profound inner reckoning. As a reader, and especially as a developmental editor, I was struck by the way Bennett threads psychological realism into a fantastical framework. Reika’s arc isn’t just a magical evolution; it’s a deeply human coming-of-age shaped by trauma, survival, and rediscovered agency.

What impressed me most is how author Bennett manages to juggle a vast ensemble cast including Junayd, Kenzuo, Lief, Destrian, and so many others, without losing narrative focus. Each character, even those on the margins, feels fully rendered with complex motivations and believable flaws. Thankfully, the villainy isn’t cartoonish and the heroes aren’t infallible. It’s this grey-toned morality that adds gravitas to the story, grounding its epic battles and magical lore in real emotional stakes.

The world-building is elaborate and detailed, perhaps a touch overwhelming at times, especially with terms like Dragelve Consortium, Somnium Carcerem, and Ferrum Champions flying fast and a bit too early (for me personally), but readers who love rich lore will find much to feast on. There’s a real sense of history behind every location, political alliance, and magical artifact.

Stylistically, the prose leans towards cinematic, with fast-paced scenes punctuated with high-octane action. But where author Bennett shines is in quieter moments, like a quiet conversation under moonlight, that give the narrative its soul.

What keeps this book from being a full 5 stars is pacing: there are moments where exposition threatens to bog down the emotional momentum, and the sheer number of locations and lore elements can be disorienting. That said, it’s a minor flaw in what is otherwise an impressively ambitious debut.

For readers of Brandon Sanderson, Tamora Pierce, or Fullmetal Alchemist, Lunarmancer will feel both nostalgic and refreshingly bold. It’s a tale of found family, inherited power, and the subtle, unglamorous courage it takes to choose your own path, even when fate has already written your story.


You can also read this review at:

Goodreads


Amazon


One response to “Book Review: Lunarmancer by Jake Bennett”

  1. satyam rastogi Avatar

    Wonderful post 🎸thanks for sharing🎸

    Like

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I’m Heena

Welcome to The Reading Bud, my cosy corner of the internet dedicated to all things books and authors. Here, I invite you to join me on a journey of discovering under-represented books, independent and small press authors, and all things book with a touch of love and loud purrs. Let’s get Reading!

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