
Despite all its flaws, The Isle in the Silver Sea by Tasha Suri is a wonderful book—one that all fans of the recent The Everlasting by Alix E. Harrow (review coming ASAP) should absolutely consider picking up.
The setting is gorgeous, the love story tragic and intense, and my only real gripe is the sense that the author may have been forced to compress a little too much narrative and backstory into a limited page count. As much as I appreciate standalone novels, a story of this scope would likely have benefited from a broader canvas… even just a duology.
And yet, even so, I’ll say it plainly: The Isle in the Silver Sea is a perfect example of how new-generation romantasy should be written. Not as yet another entry meant to fuel endless “it’s so addictive, and the spice is amazing!” reading lists, but as a complex, ambitious work meant to endure.
The Isle in the Silver Sea: Plot Overview
On an island that lives on stories, a knight and a witch are doomed to love—and destroy—each other, over and over again, across hundreds of lifetimes.
Simran is a forest witch. Vina is a knight in the queen’s court. When the two women begin to fall in love, how can they give in to their desires if doing so means their mutual destruction?
As they search for a way to break the cycle, a mysterious assassin begins targeting stories like theirs. To survive, Vina and Simran must write a new one—a story stronger than the fate laid out before them.
But what story could possibly be stronger than that of the Knight and the Witch?
The Isle in the Silver Sea: Review
That opening provocation about “disposable” romantasy wasn’t accidental. Tasha Suri, alongside authors like Alix E. Harrow and T. Kingfisher, proves that it’s possible to inhabit this genre without flattening it—and, most importantly, without reducing it to a checklist of tropes or a hollow race to follow current publishing trends.
In The Isle in the Silver Sea, Suri truly shines in her worldbuilding and ideas. The result is a rich, original, deeply immersive narrative universe: a fusion of British folklore, literary imagination, and a visceral love for stories—both those passed down and those yet to be written.
Alongside this foundation, the novel weaves in surprisingly relevant themes. Beneath the surface, readers will find reflections on anti-colonialism, a strong anti-monarchic tension, and a compelling vision of found family as an alternative to traditional power structures.
Expectations Matter
The love story between Vina and Simran is, ultimately, well crafted: it works, it’s believable, but it rarely becomes the emotional core of the novel. That’s because the narrative is so dense with ideas and imagery that their relationship often takes a back seat.
Is that a flaw? It depends on what you’re looking for.
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