
Content levels
Trigger warnings
Positive tags
Hero archetypes
Heroine archetypes
Protagonist archetypes
Tropes
Synopsis
Summer faery princess, half human, Meghan is deserted by the Winter prince she thought loved her, becomes a prisoner of the Winter faery queen, and loses her own fey powers. As war looms between Summer and Winter, Meghan knows that the real danger comes from the Iron fey--ironbound faeries that only she and her absent prince have seen. But no one believes her--and trusting a seeming traitor could be deadly.
Is The Iron Daughter (Iron Fey #2) appropriate for my child?
Suitable for most readers 13 and up.
A YA fae fantasy with romantic tension, imprisonment themes, and war looming between courts. Violence is fantasy-appropriate (battles, peril) but not graphic; romance includes kissing and longing but no explicit content.
What to know going in
This book has moderate violence, mild sexual content, and clean language. Content notes include captivity, abandonment, and betrayal (see the full list above).
Who'll love this
Teens will love the dramatic fae court politics, forbidden romance with a Winter prince, and a heroine fighting to prove the Iron fey threat is real.