The Ballad of Falling Dragons
Sarah A. Parker
The Ballad of Falling Dragons
A sequel that deepens dragon lore and cosmic mythology, continuing an epic fantasy romance across multiple worlds. The stakes grow larger as ancient prophecies collide with personal desire. Lovers must triumph over fate itself to save both their hearts and their worlds.
Everything You Need to Know About The Ballad of Falling Dragons
Raeve is still burning with vengeance against a world that keeps slipping from her grasp. Kaan Vaegor, immortal, kingly, anchor to a past she hasn't lived, is all she wants and can't have. But the Moonfall is coming again, and it will be catastrophic. Kaan's kingdom is fracturing. His calls for help go unanswered. Raeve must choose between the chase death of vengeance and actually saving the person she loves. Dragons are falling. The world is fracturing. And love might cost everything.
Parker builds worlds that feel fully alive. The magic system isn't explained in exposition dumps, you learn it through action. Raeve's character arc from book one doesn't reset; she's still broken, still angry, but growth happens sideways. The dragon mythology is stunning. Kaan's internal conflict between duty and desire is genuinely painful. The action sequences are kinetic and clear.
Violence, dragon death, war, grief, complicated romantic dynamics, destruction/apocalyptic themes.
Raeve must face the person she's been hunting and decide if vengeance is worth losing Kaan. The Moonfall happens and reshapes the continent. Kaan makes an impossible choice about his crown and his heart. The ending positions them not as heroes who've won, but as survivors who might get to choose what comes next.
Fans of When the Moon Hatched who are ready for the emotional stakes to intensify. For readers who love slowburn relationships that have real obstacles. If you want Sylvia Moreno-Garcia's gorgeous prose with Sarah J. Maas's world-building ambition, this fits.
Book 2 of the Moonfall series. Direct continuation from When the Moon Hatched. Ends on a note that allows for future books but feels substantial as a stopping point.
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