๐ŸŽง
AudiobookSoul
Court of Mist and Fury audiobook cover
โญ 4.0 Overall
๐ŸŽค 4.0 Narration
Sample First
23h 17m
James Cooper, audiobook curator
Reviewed byJames Cooper

Retired Colonel, 25 years Army. Cried during The Things They Carried.

Last updated:

Share:

Perfect For ๐ŸŽง

Commute
Workout
Focus
Bedtime
Chores
Travel

Look, I'm going to be straight with you. This is not my usual territory. At all.

I was driving back from a client meeting in Houston - three hours of I-10 that feels like six - when my usual thriller queue ran dry. My daughter had been bugging me for months to try this series. "Dad, just trust me," she kept saying. So there I was, a 58-year-old retired Colonel, downloading a fantasy romance about fairies. Ranger gave me a look from the passenger seat that said he wasn't sure about this either.

Twenty-three hours later? I get it. I actually get it.

Not What I Expected (In a Good Way)

Here's the thing - I went in expecting something fluffy. What I got was a surprisingly honest portrayal of trauma and recovery wrapped in a fantasy package. Feyre's dealing with PTSD after the events of the first book, and Maas doesn't sugarcoat it. The nightmares, the hollowness, the way she's going through the motions while falling apart inside - I've seen that. I've been that, after my second deployment. The fantasy setting is window dressing, but the emotional core? That's real.

The first chunk of the book is slow. I'll admit I almost bailed around hour three. Feyre's stuck in this relationship that's clearly not working, and it drags. But then the story shifts locations, new characters come in, and suddenly I'm white-knuckling the steering wheel through Austin traffic because I need to know what happens next.

The world-building is solid. Seven courts, each with distinct power structures and political tensions. Maas clearly did her homework on creating a believable power dynamic between these factions. It's not military strategy exactly, but there's enough tactical thinking to keep me engaged. And when the action sequences hit - and they do hit - they're visceral and well-paced.

Jennifer Ikeda Behind the Mic

Okay, so Jennifer Ikeda. She's carrying 23 hours of material here, and that's no small feat. Her Feyre is appropriately raw - you can hear the exhaustion and trauma in the early chapters. The character voices are distinct enough that I never lost track of who was speaking, which matters when you're juggling this many players.

Her Rhysand is... interesting. She gives him this smooth, slightly dangerous quality that works for the character. Some of the male voices can blend together a bit, but the main players stay distinct. Where she really shines is the emotional scenes. There's a moment around the midpoint - I won't spoil it - where Feyre finally breaks down, and Ikeda's delivery hit me harder than I expected. (Linda walked in while I was listening in the garage and asked if I was okay. I blamed allergies.)

The pacing at 1.25x worked fine for most of it. I bumped down to normal speed for a few of the more intense scenes just to let them breathe.

What Might Bug You

Fair warning: this book is long. Like, really long. And there are stretches in the middle where the romance takes center stage and the plot kind of... waits. If you're not invested in the relationship dynamics, those sections will test your patience.

Also - and my daughter would kill me for saying this - some of the dialogue gets a little... dramatic? There are declarations of love and loyalty that made me roll my eyes a bit. But honestly, that's the genre. I knew what I was signing up for.

The first act drags. I mentioned it, but it bears repeating. Push through. It pays off.

Who Should Listen

This is not for everyone, and I'm not going to pretend it is. If you want pure action and military precision, look elsewhere. But if you're open to something different - a fantasy with genuine emotional weight, solid world-building, and a protagonist working through real trauma - give it a shot.

My daughter was right. (Don't tell her I said that.)

I'm apparently listening to the next one now. Ranger seems resigned to his fate.

The Verdict

Worth your time? Here's the debrief: It's a 23-hour commitment that earns its runtime - mostly. The slow start is a tactical disadvantage, but the payoff in the back half delivers. Ikeda's narration carries the emotional weight effectively. Not my usual mission, but mission accomplished.

Ranger approved this one. Reluctantly.

Technical Audit ๐Ÿ”

Audio production quality notes that may affect your listening experience

๐ŸŽ™๏ธ
Single-narrator

Read by a single narrator throughout the entire audiobook.

๐Ÿ“š
Unabridged

Complete and uncut version of the original text.

Quick Info

Release Date:May 3, 2016
Duration:23h 17m
Language:English
Best Speed:1.25x

About the Narrator

Jennifer Ikeda

Jennifer Ikeda is an American actress and audiobook narrator known for her versatile performances in film, television, and audiobooks. She graduated from The Juilliard School and began her audiobook narration career in 2002. Ikeda is renowned for narrating bestselling fantasy series such as Sarah J. Maas's A Court of Thorns and Roses.

5 books
4.2 rating