{Review+Excerpt} The Wind Weaver by Julie Johnson

Posted April 14, 2025 by Michelle @ Book Briefs in Adult, Reviews / 0 Comments

{Review+Excerpt} The Wind Weaver by Julie JohnsonThe Wind Weaver by Julie Johnson
on April 8, 2025
Series: Reign of Remnants #1
Genres: adult, Fantasy, Fantasy & Magic, Romance
five-stars

Magic and adventure swirl through this spellbinding romantasy where a young woman reignites the embers of an ancient prophecy, unleashing a storm that could save her realm or doom them all.

Fear of maegic plagues war-torn Anwyvn. Halflings like Rhya Fleetwood are killed on sight. But Rhya’s execution is interrupted by an unexpected savior—one far more terrifying than her would-be killers. The mysterious and mercenary Commander Scythe. In the clutches of this new enemy, Rhya finds herself fighting for her life in the barren reaches of the Northlands. Yet the farther she gets from home, the more she learns that nothing is as it seems—not her fearsome captor, not the blight that ravages her dying realm, not even herself.

For Rhya is no ordinary halfling. The strange birthmark on her chest and the wind she instinctively calls forth means she is a Remnant, one of four souls scattered across Anwyvn, fated to restore the balance of maegic…or die trying.

But mastering the power inside her is only the beginning. Desire for the Commander—a man she can never trust, a man with plans of his own—burns just as fiercely as the tempests beating against her rib cage for release. Rhya must choose: smother the flames…or let them consume her.

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My Thoughts

The Wind Weaver is the first book in the Reign of Remnants series by Julie Johnson. This is a slowww burn romantasy that completely captured my full attention right from the very start. This was such a welcome because lately I have been reading books where I have to push through the first 5-20% before the story picks up and starts to grab my attention. That is so not the case here. Right from the very first page I was completely pulled into the world of halfings, and humans and fae.

The fae have been eradicated from the world, and halflings are hunted and executed. Our main character, Rhya is an orphaned halfling that is on the run and gets captured. Right before her execution she gets rescued, only to find out her rescuer has so many secrets of his own, and she is now kidnapped and being transported to somewhere in the wild northlands. Her captor is Penn and he is grouchy and grumpy and I loved him from his very first scene.

Rhya finds out that she is being taken because of the strange mark on her chest, which she learns means she is one of the four sacred remnants- wielders of elemental magic who are part of a big prophecy.

The Wind Weaver completely swept me up in its’ current and captivated me. I loved this book. The romance is great, but it is a very slow burn with an enemies to lovers vibe. I can’t wait to see where it is going to go in the next book. The action really ramped up in the last part of the novel and I know the next installment will be even more action packed because of how we left things.

The Wind Weaver is a fantastic romantasy with epic fantasy vibes. Fans of elemental magic, fae, and enemies to lovers romance will love this book! It took me by surprise in the best way!

 

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The noose chafes, a necklace of death.

I feel my pulse-steady, staccato-thudding away beneath the fragile skin at my throat. There’s no fear. Not anymore. That came earlier, with the bruising hands and snarling hounds that tracked me through the wild marshland. And it fled with the sun, slipping over the horizon into crushing darkness.

What is it Eli always said?

Fear only means you have something left to lose.

I have nothing left now. Nothing but my life, and that isn’t worth much of anything to anyone.

Certainly not to my captors.

“Wily little bitch, isn’t she?” A gruff voice barks out a laugh somewhere to my left. “Took half our unit to track her down. A dozen men. Three days we spent in that damned bog with wasps and snakes and spiders. Knee-deep in mud and moss and all manner of shit. She nearly slipped our net when we lost the light yesterday.” A gob of spit lands on my cheek. “Faery scum.”

Another voice answers-this one younger, and slightly wavering. A new recruit, perhaps, not yet worn-out by this endless, bloody game of war the mortal men seem intent on playing. “She’s just-she’s so young.”

“Don’t let your eyes fool you, boy. Faery trickery, that is. They mask their true nature with pretty faces and sweet smiles, same as a poisonous flower. In the olden days, they say some of them cast such a glamour, could make you see anything they wanted. March you straight off a cliff, thinking you were skipping through a field of daisies.”

The younger soldier sucks in an audible breath. His terror is palpable even through my blindfold.

“Don’t worry, son. Maegic like that hasn’t been seen in these parts in nigh on two centuries.” The gruff voice chuckles. “The ones we hunt down, like this runt here, are halflings mostly. Leftovers from before the Cull, back when bloodline mixing wasn’t outlawed. They’re no more enchanted than you or me.”

There’s a marked pause. A cave of silence yawning wide between the two men.

“‘Course, that don’t make ’em helpless,” the older soldier tacks on, almost defensively. “She’d gut us in our sleep given half the chance. Never doubt that.”

“How did you finally catch her?”

“Ran her to ground by the Red Chasm. The ore in those rocks is enough to confuse ’em. Clouds their sense of direction, muddies their minds.” He exhales a sharp breath. “No foe is invincible-not even a damned point.”

I tense at the slur, binds going tight across my chest despite my attempts to keep still. Point. The soldiers who’ve taken me prisoner use the insult often, hissing it at me under their breath when they change watches, tossing it around in casual campfire conversation. As if reducing an entire race to our most notable physical trait-the pointed tip of an ear-somehow makes their barbarity easier to stomach. Every time I hear it, something within me snarls in silent rage. A broken beast, itching for retribution that will never be mine.

Gods above, grant me vengeance in my next life.

“Ain’t so hard to kill ’em, actually. Just a matter of finding the right weapon,” the older soldier boasts, brimming with sage wisdom. “Iron’s best, of course. But, gods’ truth, stick ’em with anything sharp and the job’s done. Points bleed, same as any other beast in the forest. Didn’t your pa take you hunting, son? Haven’t you ever gutted a doe?”

“No . . . I . . . We . . .” The young soldier shifts from foot to foot, boots crunching dead leaves. “We’re crofters, sir.”

“Crofters?”

“Yes, sir. We tithe a tract by the coast. Iceberries, mostly.”

The older soldier scoffs. “Well, you’ll need ice in your berries for this deployment, I’ll tell you that. Cold as all fuck, this close to the Cimmerians.”

Behind my blindfold, I imagine the scene. An encampment of soldiers, weather beaten from weeks on the road. A crackling fire to ward off the chill-and the wolves. A simple dinner cooking over the coals.

The smell of meat carries to me on the wind, and my stomach rumbles a contemptuous response. Hare, most likely, or a steer. Maybe a wild boar, if one of them is skilled enough with a bow. For surely there are hunters among their number. Men capable of tracking down some prey besides me and my kind. Though if we were edible, they might eat us, too.

It’s been an unforgiving winter.

I wonder to which kingdom they belong, to which of the warring kings they’ve pledged their fealty. Perhaps the very one who sent his armies into Seahaven and set the Starlight Wood aflame-and the only home I’ve ever known along with it.

A hand tugs at the shackles around my raw wrists. I hear the hiss an instant before the pain bolts through me. The smell of charred skin hits my nostrils.

My own flesh, burning.

It takes all my self-possession not to cry out-but I will not give these soldiers the satisfaction. Breathing deeply, I press my spine harder against the bark of the tree to which I’m lashed, trying not to lose consciousness.

Gods above, it hurts.

“See how she blisters?” the older soldier asks. “You’d think I’d taken a blazing log to her!”

“Y-yes,” the youth stammers. “I see.”

The irons stir a ceaseless tide of agony that never recedes-even now, after my wrists are scorched nearly to bone and sinew. Each shift of my chains sets off a fresh flow of anguish.

“When . . .” The young recruit clears his throat. “When will they . . .”

“String her up? Won’t be long now. Commander Scythe will be here by midnight. Captain says we can’t touch her till he signs off.”

“Why?”

“Likes to be sure they’re really dead, I suppose. Kick around the ashes a bit, make certain nothing stirs. Seems overboard to me, but it’s on order of King Eld, so I do as I’m told. Hang ’em up, burn ’em down.” There’s the sound of a cork being unstoppered. A throat working to swallow the contents of a flask. A steadying breath. “Folks tend to get a touch superstitious when it comes to faery executions. You’ll see, lad.”

“Right . . .” The young man sounds unconvinced. “When I enlisted, I didn’t think we’d be hunting halflings. I didn’t know there were any left.”

“Not many, these days. ‘Specially this far up in the Midlands. The Southlanders have some . . . different practices. You should thank the skies you aren’t stationed at the border to the Reaches. Hard to stomach, from what I’ve heard. And I ain’t heard much.”

My heart lurches. I’ve not been spared the rumors of what happens to halflings in the Southlands. Not in full. Eli gave me the briefest of glimpses at that darkness one night over a stiff dram of whiskey.

They might not kill you right away, Rhya, but the things they’ll do to you will make you wish they had . . .

I force my thoughts from that dark path. It leads nowhere good.

Excerpted from The Wind Weaver by Julie Johnson Copyright © 2025 by Julie Johnson. Excerpted by permission of Ace. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.

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