Guardians of Dawn: Zhara (Guardians of Dawn, 1) by S. Jae-Jones is about a young woman, Jin Zhara, who is trying to come to terms with her magical powers in a world where magic is banned. Magic is forbidden in the world of Morning Realms. Magicians are called abominations and put to death when they are discovered. This was because the ruler blames magicians for transforming into monsters that had destroyed and dominated the land twenty years earlier.
Zhara lives with a cruel stepmother and her blind younger sister. Zhara has to keep her stepmother happy otherwise, her stepmother might turn Zhara in to the Kestrels. The Kestrels keep the Morning Realms free of magicians and kill anyone who is against them. The last thing Zhara needs is anyone finding out that she has magical powers.
On a chance encounter, Zhara crosses paths with a young man, Han, who brings her into contact with a secret magical group called the Guardians of Dawn. Zhara heard rumors of the Guardians and thought they were just rumors. Together with Han, Zhara investigates more into the Guardians and realizes that there is more to these rumors than she thought. As if Zhara doesn’t have enough on her plate, a mysterious plague is corrupting the magicians of Morning Realms and turning them into monsters. The Guardians believe that it is a demon that is responsible for the destruction. Will Zhara and Han be able to figure out who is behind the corruption before all is lost forever?
I thought the book was an okay read. I did like some aspects of the world-building, but I found some parts confusing. For example, they mention that there is a ruler in the city where Zhara and Han live but then there is another leader in another land that had put martial law against magicians into effect. That allowed one of the ruler’s wives to be killed against her husband’s wishes. I wish the hierarchy of the rulers and some parts of the worldbuilding were either fleshed out more or included in an index.
The book was engaging at times, but it felt that it moved very slowly. There were pages where nothing happened, and it felt boring. There were a lot of characters and past storylines that were hard to keep track of. Like the worldbuilding aspect, I wish there was an index, or that it was fleshed out more. I did think some parts were a bit juvenile in how young the characters acted. It felt like every “main” character had the “good looks giggles” at some point. I thought the book was an okay read. I would be open to reading more books from the series, but I wouldn’t go out of my way for them.