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AudiobookSoul
Fourth Wing audiobook cover
⭐ 4.0 Overall
🎀 3.5 Narration
Must Listen
21h 22m
Tom Bradley, audiobook curator
Reviewed byTom Bradley

CS grad student. Thesis progress: concerning. Will defend LitRPG with dying breath.

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Perfect For 🎧

Commute
Workout
Focus
Bedtime
Chores
Travel

Look, I Need to Talk About This

Okay, so here's the thing. I started Fourth Wing at 2 AM because I was "just going to listen to one chapter" while avoiding my thesis. (Dr. Patel, if you're reading this, I was definitely working on procedural generation algorithms.) Twenty-one hours later, I emerged from my apartment like a gremlin who'd discovered sunlight, having listened through an entire coding session, a grocery run, and what was supposed to be sleep.

This book is basically what happens when someone takes dragon rider academy tropes, adds a dash of enemies-to-lovers romance, and cranks everything up to eleven. And honestly? I'm not mad about it.

The World-Building Situation

Let me be real for a second - this isn't Sanderson-level world-building. The magic system is more vibes than rules, and if you're the type who needs to understand exactly how the dragon bonding works on a mechanical level, you might be frustrated. But here's what Yarros does get right: the war college itself. Basgiath feels lived in. The politics between the quadrants, the brutal training regime, the way everyone is constantly one bad decision away from getting incinerated - the progression is satisfying in that "video game leveling up" way that scratches the same itch as good LitRPG.

Violet as a protagonist works because she's not secretly the strongest person there. She's fragile, she has a condition that makes her bones break easier, and she has to actually think her way through problems. My D&D group would love this - she's basically a wizard who rolled terrible stats for constitution but maxed out intelligence. Every victory feels earned because you genuinely believe she could die at any moment.

The dragons themselves? Chef's kiss. They're not cuddly companions - they're ancient, terrifying creatures who will absolutely roast you if you bore them. That's the energy I want from my fantasy creatures.

Rebecca Soler and Teddy Hamilton Walk Into a Recording Booth

Okay, so the dual narration thing. Rebecca Soler handles Violet's POV and she nails the inner monologue - the sarcasm, the fear, the determination. There's this moment early on where Violet is literally climbing a death bridge (yes, really) and Soler's voice gets this tight, controlled quality that made me grip my steering wheel harder during my commute. That's good narration.

Teddy Hamilton does the bonus chapters from Xaden's perspective, and look - the man knows how to do brooding romantic interest. His Xaden has this gravelly intensity that works really well for the whole "I might kill you or kiss you" energy the character requires. The extended version with his bonus chapters is worth the re-download if you haven't grabbed it yet.

That said, I wouldn't put either narrator in the Steven Pacey tier. (Steven Pacey walked so other narrators could run, and that's just facts.) The character differentiation is good but not exceptional - some of the secondary characters blend together vocally, especially in group scenes. It's not a dealbreaker, but I did occasionally lose track of who was speaking during the more chaotic training sequences.

Fair Warning: This Might Not Be For You

Let me be honest about who should skip this. If you need your fantasy to be grimdark and "realistic," this isn't it. The romance is central to the plot and it's very much in the romantasy tradition - there's tension, there's yearning, there are scenes that are decidedly spicy. (I listened to some of those while grocery shopping and had to very carefully maintain a neutral expression in the cereal aisle.)

Also, if slow burns frustrate you, know that this book takes its TIME getting the main characters together. The pacing in the middle third drags a bit - there's a lot of training montage energy that could've been tightened. I found myself bumping the speed to 1.25x during some of the repetitive academy sequences, which helped considerably.

And the ending? It's a cliffhanger. A brutal one. So if you hate being left hanging, maybe wait until you can immediately start Iron Flame.

The Verdict

Yes, it's 21 hours. Yes, it's worth it. This is popcorn fantasy in the best way - it's not trying to be profound, it's trying to be fun, and it succeeds. The world has enough depth to keep you engaged, the stakes feel real, and there's a dragon named Tairn whose personality alone is worth the listen.

I read this instead of writing my thesis, and I regret nothing. (I regret some things. But not this.)

If you liked the Throne of Glass series, if you've ever wanted to attend a fantasy military academy, or if you just want to listen to something that makes commuting actually enjoyable - give this one a shot. It's not going to change your life, but it might make you stay up until 2 AM on a Tuesday.

And honestly, isn't that what we're all looking for?

Technical Audit πŸ”

Audio production quality notes that may affect your listening experience

πŸŽ™οΈ
Single-narrator

Read by a single narrator throughout the entire audiobook.

πŸ“š
Unabridged

Complete and uncut version of the original text.

✨
Clean-audio

Professionally produced with minimal background noise and consistent quality.

Quick Info

Release Date:May 2, 2023
Duration:21h 22m
Language:English
Best Speed:1.25x

About the Narrator

Rebecca Soler

Rebecca Soler is a New York City–based actress and audiobook narrator known for her work on popular fantasy and young adult titles. She has narrated notable series such as The Lunar Chronicles by Marissa Meyer and has received multiple awards for her narration work. She continues to be active in voice acting and theater.

2 books
3.5 rating