
Iron Flame
by Rebecca Yarros · 2023
Violet returns to Basgiath War College for a brutal second year, as the war escalates and the cracks in what she's been told about the kingdom's leadership start splitting wide open.
Worth reading? Iron Flame keeps the training-arc tension from Fourth Wing but widens the lens into kingdom-level conspiracy, which is a reasonable escalation though it costs some of the first book's tight pacing -- there's more plot to track and more characters competing for page time. It's a middle-series book doing middle-series things: raising stakes, complicating the romance, setting up book three. Fans of Fourth Wing will find it a worthy continuation; it's not a good jumping-on point.
| Author | Rebecca Yarros |
|---|---|
| Published | 2023 |
| Category | Fiction |
The Verdict
The shift from “survive training” to “survive a conspiracy” is the right instinct for a sequel, but it does mean Iron Flame trades some of Fourth Wing’s claustrophobic tension for a broader, slower-building plot. If you loved the first book specifically for its pacing, temper expectations slightly here – the payoff is still there, it just takes longer to arrive.
you already read and liked Fourth Wing and want the direct continuation, with higher stakes, a bigger cast, and the political conspiracy plot expanding
you haven't read Fourth Wing -- this is a direct sequel that assumes full knowledge of book one's relationships, deaths, and reveals; starting here will make no sense, read Fourth Wing first

Top 6 Lessons from Iron Flame
- Widening a story's scope (training-arc to kingdom-level conspiracy) is a natural sequel move, but it costs some of the original's tight pacing.
- A larger cast competing for page time can dilute a series' strongest asset if it isn't managed carefully.
- A sequel that assumes full knowledge of book one respects the reader more than it should worry about accessibility.
- Escalating a romance's complications works better when it's tied to the widening plot, not just added drama.
- Middle-series books have a real job -- raise stakes, complicate relationships, set up the next installment -- even when that job costs some momentum.
- Political conspiracy plots need their own pacing discipline or they slow a book that built its reputation on urgency.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Iron Flame worth reading?
Yes, if you enjoyed Fourth Wing -- it continues the story with higher stakes and more worldbuilding. It's not a standalone experience.
Do I need to read Fourth Wing before Iron Flame?
Yes, absolutely. Iron Flame is a direct sequel with no recap -- it assumes you remember the relationships, deaths, and twists from Fourth Wing.
Is Iron Flame the last book in the series?
No, the Empyrean series continues beyond Iron Flame, with more books planned by Rebecca Yarros.
Is Iron Flame as good as Fourth Wing?
Reception is generally positive but more mixed than book one -- some readers find the expanded political plot and larger cast dilute the tighter pacing that made Fourth Wing stand out.
Ready to read it?
Get Iron Flame on Amazon






