With Faithbreaker, Hannah Kaner delivers a searing and emotionally complex conclusion to the Fallen Gods trilogy, a series that has steadily carved its niche in the modern mythopoeic canon. Picking up the mantle from Godkiller and Sunbringer, this final installment is a storm of war cries, love lost and found, fractured alliances, and divine reckonings. It’s not just a finale—it’s a reckoning.
Kaner’s trilogy has always struck a rare chord between myth and mortal messiness. In Faithbreaker, she elevates that balance to a crescendo. Her writing, steeped in poetic grimness and tender introspection, has evolved without losing its sharp edge. The tale is not just about gods and monsters—it’s about what remains after the faith has been broken.
Previously, in Middren: A Brief Rewind
Godkiller introduced us to Kissen, the foul-mouthed, fire-hearted veiga, and her unlikely companions: the knight-baker Elogast, the noble child Inara, and the god of white lies, Skediceth. It was a brutal, brilliant beginning that tore down divine certainties.
Sunbringer complicated the tapestry, digging deeper into themes of loyalty, queerness, inherited power, and belief. The gods began to return, not as saviors, but as desperate remnants of faith.
Faithbreaker is the war song. It is the breath before the final clash. And it dares to ask the most dangerous question in any epic: What if salvation was never the point at all?
Plot Overview: War, Fire, and Fractured Loyalties
In Faithbreaker by Hannah Kaner, war is not coming—it is here. The fire god Hseth blazes a path of ruin across Middren, her priests fanning flames with both faith and cruelty. The kingdom fractures under the weight of old sins and new bargains.
Elogast struggles with the line between duty and heartbreak, forced into uneasy alliance with King Arren, whose betrayal in Sunbringer still bleeds into every word they speak.
Kissen, ever the reluctant hero, seeks to find her sisters, but her path winds through memories and questions: who deserves saving in a world that worships pain?
Inara, now on the cusp of womanhood, grapples with her godly lineage and mortal fears, her bond with Skediceth both anchor and spark.
Arren, a king torn between his own ambition and the god in his chest, becomes the fulcrum of the entire war—and perhaps its undoing.
The story unfolds across scorched cities, rebel-held ships, and god-haunted shrines. Kaner writes not just with fire, but with smoke—with what remains after things burn.
Characters: Heartbeats in the Chaos
Kissen – The Faithless Believer
Once the godslayer with nothing to lose, Kissen’s arc reaches its most vulnerable peak. Her love for Elo is platonic and fierce, and her loyalty to Inara is quietly moving. Kaner allows Kissen to be both sword and scar—a woman forged by loss who never asks to be anyone’s savior.
Elogast – The Shattered Knight
Elo’s character is Kaner’s most human. Caught between love and loyalty, between the king who broke his heart and the people who still need him, his struggle is not about winning the war—it’s about surviving himself. His moments of softness with Kissen and quiet rage toward Arren are the emotional pillars of the novel.
Inara – The Becoming
Inara’s coming-of-age is not sweet—it is sacred and brutal. Her grief over Tarin, her distrust of her mother, and her slow mastery of power paint her as a girl growing into godhood, and a god aching for childhood.
Arren – The King with a Burning Chest
A deeply polarizing character, Arren walks a blade’s edge between villainy and tragic figure. His moments of introspection never absolve him—but they deepen him. He is a study in corrupted faith, and Kaner wisely resists redemption arcs that would ring false.
Writing Style: Myth Wrought in Steel and Smoke
Hannah Kaner’s prose in Faithbreaker is sharpened poetry—rhythmic, lyrical, and unapologetically visceral. The world bleeds through the page: hearthfires turn to ash, ships creak with memory, gods speak in symbols and scars.
She writes as though language itself were a divine act, capable of both creation and destruction. Dialogue is taut and often laced with emotional subtext. Battle scenes are raw and cinematic, yet never gratuitous. Tenderness—when it appears—is hard-won, and therefore sacred.
Her control over mood and momentum is also more confident than in the first two books. Where Godkiller galloped and Sunbringer spiraled, Faithbreaker holds a drumbeat of inevitability. Even quiet scenes bristle with consequence.
Themes: Belief, Betrayal, and the Cost of Survival
1. Faith as Weapon and Wound
Faith—its loss, its manipulation, and its reclamation—is the book’s spine. Characters are not merely fighting a god—they’re fighting the aftermath of believing in something that doesn’t love them back.
2. The Personal is Political
From queer love and chosen families to failed revolutions and reluctant monarchs, Kaner never lets us forget that personal decisions ripple across nations. Especially for Kissen and Elo, love becomes an act of resistance.
3. What Do We Owe the Dead?
Tarin’s death mid-novel is devastating and symbolic. She represents not just a personal loss for Inara, but a political one. Faithbreaker constantly interrogates the price of loyalty—and whether survival is enough.
Critique: Not All Flames Burn Brightly
Despite the strength of the narrative, Faithbreaker by Hannah Kaner is not without fault.
Pacing: The novel occasionally stumbles in its middle third. Strategic alliances and troop movements slow the emotional core, particularly as Inara’s journey takes a backseat to larger politics.
Overcrowding: With such a large cast, some arcs feel underexplored. Characters like Skediceth are rich in potential but used sparingly in the final battles.
Emotional Distance: In some key moments (especially in the climax), Kaner’s lyrical prose creates a fog of abstraction. Readers may crave a closer, grittier emotional impact in the moments that matter most.
Still, these are minor burns in an otherwise roaring fire.
Comparative Reading: For Fans Of…
If you enjoyed:
The Priory of the Orange Tree by Samantha Shannon
The Poppy War by R.F. Kuang
The Witcher series by Andrzej Sapkowski
For the Wolf by Hannah Whitten
…you will find familiar magic in Faithbreaker. Kaner sits comfortably among these giants, blending myth and character with a distinct voice of her own.
Final Verdict: Faith Fractured, Found, and Forged Anew
Faithbreaker by Hannah Kaner is a bold, bloody, and beautiful end to a trilogy that never flinched from moral ambiguity. It doesn’t seek to comfort, but to challenge. To burn. And to let something new rise from the ashes.
Where Godkiller was a spark and Sunbringer a torch, Faithbreaker is the wildfire: uncontrollable, destructive, but full of possibility.
A Final Note on Gratitude
As a reader and reviewer who had the chance to receive an advance reader copy of Faithbreaker, I want to share this: opening those early pages felt like being entrusted with something sacred. Something still alight with divine breath and mortal ink. In return for that privilege, I offer this honest review—scarred, grateful, and completely in awe of what Hannah Kaner has built.