Shadow Reaper
A young reaper hunter must conspire with her enemy to uproot the ancient evil that threatens her world in this heart-pounding romantic fantasy from the bestselling author of The Prison Healer.

"This year's must read YA fantasy." -Rebecca Yarros, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Fourth Wing

The city of Aravell is in peril, plagued by a deadly blackmist that kills all it touches and reapers who roam the streets, stealing magic from innocent children in their thirst for power. Seventeen-year-old Viridia Solace has trained for years to hunt these reapers, but their ranks keep growing, led by the man who murdered her parents: the Reaper Priest.

When the Priest's most loyal follower, Reeve Ashton, is captured, he offers Viri a chance to avenge her parents . . . for a price. She knows better than to bargain with a reaper, let alone this reaper, but his offer is too good to resist.

Soon she's breaking him out of prison, colluding with his crew of magic thieves, and following him deep into the blackmist forest in search of an ancient legend, all so they can stop the Reaper Priest's plot to doom the city. Viri is staking her life on Reeve's plan, but how can she trust a silver-tongued criminal to keep his word? And how can she trust her own heart when a buried secret could shatter everything?

Full of relentless twists, enemies-to-lovers romance, found family, and high-stakes action, Shadow Reaper is the start of a breathtaking new duology from international bestselling author Lynette Noni.
1148503892
Shadow Reaper
A young reaper hunter must conspire with her enemy to uproot the ancient evil that threatens her world in this heart-pounding romantic fantasy from the bestselling author of The Prison Healer.

"This year's must read YA fantasy." -Rebecca Yarros, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Fourth Wing

The city of Aravell is in peril, plagued by a deadly blackmist that kills all it touches and reapers who roam the streets, stealing magic from innocent children in their thirst for power. Seventeen-year-old Viridia Solace has trained for years to hunt these reapers, but their ranks keep growing, led by the man who murdered her parents: the Reaper Priest.

When the Priest's most loyal follower, Reeve Ashton, is captured, he offers Viri a chance to avenge her parents . . . for a price. She knows better than to bargain with a reaper, let alone this reaper, but his offer is too good to resist.

Soon she's breaking him out of prison, colluding with his crew of magic thieves, and following him deep into the blackmist forest in search of an ancient legend, all so they can stop the Reaper Priest's plot to doom the city. Viri is staking her life on Reeve's plan, but how can she trust a silver-tongued criminal to keep his word? And how can she trust her own heart when a buried secret could shatter everything?

Full of relentless twists, enemies-to-lovers romance, found family, and high-stakes action, Shadow Reaper is the start of a breathtaking new duology from international bestselling author Lynette Noni.
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Shadow Reaper

Shadow Reaper

by Lynette Noni

Narrated by Not Yet Available

Unabridged

Shadow Reaper

Shadow Reaper

by Lynette Noni

Narrated by Not Yet Available

Unabridged

Audiobook (Digital)

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Available for Pre-Order. This item will be released on June 2, 2026

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Overview

A young reaper hunter must conspire with her enemy to uproot the ancient evil that threatens her world in this heart-pounding romantic fantasy from the bestselling author of The Prison Healer.

"This year's must read YA fantasy." -Rebecca Yarros, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Fourth Wing

The city of Aravell is in peril, plagued by a deadly blackmist that kills all it touches and reapers who roam the streets, stealing magic from innocent children in their thirst for power. Seventeen-year-old Viridia Solace has trained for years to hunt these reapers, but their ranks keep growing, led by the man who murdered her parents: the Reaper Priest.

When the Priest's most loyal follower, Reeve Ashton, is captured, he offers Viri a chance to avenge her parents . . . for a price. She knows better than to bargain with a reaper, let alone this reaper, but his offer is too good to resist.

Soon she's breaking him out of prison, colluding with his crew of magic thieves, and following him deep into the blackmist forest in search of an ancient legend, all so they can stop the Reaper Priest's plot to doom the city. Viri is staking her life on Reeve's plan, but how can she trust a silver-tongued criminal to keep his word? And how can she trust her own heart when a buried secret could shatter everything?

Full of relentless twists, enemies-to-lovers romance, found family, and high-stakes action, Shadow Reaper is the start of a breathtaking new duology from international bestselling author Lynette Noni.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940203366214
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 06/02/2026
Series: Shadow Reaper , #1
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

1

The slums of ­Aravell were eerily quiet at the midnight hour.

For most, it was risky to be out so late. The Nox ­Custodia imposed strict penalties upon anyone caught after curfew, and they were known to be creative with their punishments. But seventeen-­year-­old Viridia Solace wasn’t worried about the Nox—­one look at the insignia on her scarlet cloak and the city guards would keep their distance. She was more concerned by what lurked in the shadows. By who lurked in the shadows.

Her quarry.

The reason she was navigating the abandoned streets so late at night, when only the most desperate of citizens dared to peek around their sealed doors.

The most desperate of citizens—­and the most dangerous of criminals.

Moving swiftly, Viri glanced down just in time for the moonlight to glint across a puddle on the cobblestones: vomit or urine or something equally unpleasant. Perhaps all three, judging by the foul odor. After years of hunting reapers deep into the slums, she still couldn’t get used to the smells of unwashed flesh, decay, and overflowing sewage. Some days she feared she’d scrub her skin raw and yet never be clean again.

Shuddering at the phantom feel of ichor on her feet, Viri paused at a grungy intersection and considered which way to go: west, toward Lake Mirtis, or east, where the uppercity bled into the Tridus Mountains. She closed her eyes to focus her mind, and a moment later her hand began to warm, followed by a tugging sensation inside her, an instinct urging her west.

Setting off deeper into the darkness, she quickened her pace as the hunter’s mark inked into her palm continued to heat up, guiding her to her prey. The mark—­three interlocking circles representing her oath to protect, honor, and serve—­was given to her the day she became a full-­fledged reaper hunter. For most novices, training finished at eighteen, but Viri had earned her mark a year ago at just sixteen. A prodigy, her mentor had claimed. But really, she’d just had more motivation than most to see every single reaper get what they deserved.

Rowdy sounds reached Viri’s ears from up ahead, the un­expected noise making her frown as she continued forward. She was closer to Lake Mirtis than she would have liked, and acutely aware of the dangers lurking beyond the Western Obelisk at the lake’s edge. This far out in the slums, the obelisk’s protective wards were significantly weakened, and that more than the Nox ­Custodia was why most sensible surface dwellers remained inside at night. Behind their carefully sealed doors, they were shielded from the drifting blackmist—­and the agonizing death it afforded any who came in contact with it.

During the day, the four obelisks guarding the city forced the mist to withdraw to the outer reaches of Elverdine Isle. There it floated like a deadly cloud over the uninhabited forests and sea cliffs bordering the island, allowing the citizens of ­Aravell to go about their lives in relative safety. But come nightfall, when the ocean breeze picked up, not even the obelisks could keep the mist from wafting inland—­which was why most ­­Aravellians resided inside the mountains or beneath the surface in the under­city.

Viri, like any sane person, had a healthy fear of the blackmist, so she was eager to finish her hunt and return underground as soon as possible.

The mark on her hand suddenly seared, warning that she was nearing her target. A few steps later, she turned the corner of a dilapidated building to find the source of the rowdy noise: a rundown tavern on the verge of collapse.

For a moment, Viri just stood in the middle of the fetid street, wondering what careless patrons feared neither the mist nor the Nox. But then she shook her head and marched forward, ready to conclude her business. If things went to plan, she might even manage a few hours’ sleep before dawn.

Approaching the tavern—­named the Dripping Barrel, according to the broken sign above the entrance—­Viri walked straight through the moldy, splintering doorway, marveling anew at the midnight revelry. It was common for nighttime socializing to occur in the undercity and inner-mountains, where there was no need for a safety curfew and residents could do as they pleased at all hours, but it was rare to witness the same here on the surface, where breathing the very air after dark could spell doom.

The patrons inside the Dripping Barrel seemed oblivious to the dangers of the outside world, their conversations loud and laughter unrestrained. The pungent scents of spilled ale and reeking bodies burned Viri’s nose as she waded through the crowd, the mark on her hand still searing, telling her that not only was the reaper inside, but they were siphoning ellixen, right now.

Viri had always been more sensitive than most to the feeling of magic in the air—­something that had aided her swift rise to becoming a hunter and protected her during many of her run-­ins with the reapers—­but not even she could pinpoint the exact location of her quarry. All she knew was that reapers never surrendered without a fight, and if this one had already begun siphoning, then their victim didn’t have much time left.

Urgency thrummed through Viri as she approached the middle-­aged man serving drinks behind the grimy bar and called for his attention.

“What’ll it be?” he asked gruffly while pouring three ales in quick succession, foam spilling everywhere as he shoved them toward lively customers.

Viri gestured to the insignia on her scarlet cloak—­the circu­lar hunter’s mark embroidered in silver over her heart—­and said, “I’m looking for—­”

“I don’t want no trouble,” the barman cut her off quickly. He eyed her up and down, taking in the black leather attire ­beneath her hunter’s cloak, her braided red hair with its unusual silver streaks, and her startling lavender eyes. “Whatever you’re looking for—­whoever you’re looking for—­you won’t find ’em here.”

The burning of Viri’s palm said otherwise, but when she scanned the tavern again, all she could see were cheerful patrons. There was no sign of magic—­and no sign of death.

“Have you noticed anything out of the ordinary tonight?” she pressed. “Any new faces or—­”

Once again, the man interrupted her, sliding a tankard down the bar with enough force to leave a trail of liquid along the scuffed wood. “I already told you, hunter—­there’s nothing for you here. Best take your business elsewhere.”

As he spoke, Viri noted the bead of sweat that trickled from his temple down his weathered cheek; the way his gaze rested uneasily on her, then shifted away; the tremor in his hands as he continued pouring drinks. And then, finally, she saw the slightest lift of his chin as he motioned to a half-­closed door in the back corner of the room.

Viri gave a subtle nod and moved that way, ignoring the stick­iness gripping the soles of her boots as she carved a path between the noisy patrons—­many of whom staggered away upon noting the ­color of her cloak—­and approached the liquor-­stained door.

Peeking through the narrow gap, all Viri could see was a rickety staircase dropping out of sight. She pursed her lips, knowing she would lose the element of surprise at the softest creak of the ancient wood. But a sudden, urgent blazing of her hand had her throwing caution aside and sprinting recklessly down into a musty cellar. Flameless everbeacons revealed a clutter of barrels and crates and glass flagons, but her gaze darted straight past them to the two small figures pressed against the back wall, to the hulking man stalking toward them—­

And to the lifeless body he had just discarded.

A child, no older than twelve, his eyes closed, his chest unmoving.

Viri was too late to save him.

But she wasn’t too late to save the two other children, a boy and a girl who were huddled together, the fear on their tear-­stained faces indicating they knew exactly what kind of monster they faced.

They hadn’t seen Viri yet. But the man—­the reaper—­stilled, his neck swiveling her way, a sneer on his lips. With blond hair and blue eyes, he might have been handsome, if not for the fresh, undiluted magic emanating from him, the sacrifice of his young victim revealed in angry black streaks along the veins in his hands and up his bare forearms. Those streaks—­visible only to hunters and reapers—­would remain painted into his flesh until the power he’d stolen faded, offering irrefutable proof of his wicked crimes.

Crimes for which he was about to pay.

The reaper moved a step toward Viri, his sneer deepening, his eyes glazed as he adjusted to the surge of ellixen—­of magic—­flooding through him. The amount differed from child to child, but it was always enough to grant reapers increased speed and strength, enhanced senses, and swift healing. In some cases, it even added years to their lives.

Stolen years.

The price was too high, as was the guilt Viri felt for every person she failed to save. But there would be no more deaths tonight, no more victims for her to mourn. Only justice.

And one day, vengeance.

This soon after siphoning, the reaper would be stronger and faster than anything Viri could hope to match, so she couldn’t let him make the first move and gain the upper hand. Quashing any hesitation, she lunged forward, uncoiling her gold fillium from around her wrist and flicking the whiplike cord through the air. The metallic weapon cleaved the space between them, her aim true if not for the man leaping away at the last second, his gray cloak flapping around him, glass shattering as he slammed into a shelf to avoid her attack. Viri immediately cast her fillium again, causing him to dodge once more—­breaking even more glass—­but he recovered faster this time and sprang toward her, his black-­veined arms outstretched as if to strangle her with his bare hands.

Viri didn’t give him the chance. She spun out of the way and lashed her fillium low, aiming for his ankles to impede his advance. In quick succession, she cast it twice more, but his enhanced speed kept him one step ahead of her attacks.

And then, suddenly, he was right in front of her, his fist flying toward her face. The move was so fast that his arm blurred, and only years of training had her twisting in time to avoid a shattered cheekbone. His knuckles still managed a glancing blow, and she hissed as the ring on his middle finger tore open her flesh. Blood instantly welled from the wound, but Viri ignored the pain and scurried behind a wooden barrel, trying to gain enough distance to cast her fillium again.

Her opponent was no fool—­he knew what a single touch of her weapon would do to him, just as he knew its reach was limited at close range, so he rushed forward, not affording her any space, his fist coming at her once more. She ducked and whirled away again, but as she straightened, she heard the children cry out a warning as the man unsheathed a dagger and leapt toward her in a burst of speed, the blade glinting ­beneath the everbeacons.

Viri had been hunting long enough to have had experience with many kinds of reapers. Some were easy to capture, particularly those new to siphoning and unused to their ellixen-­heightened abilities. The same was true for those addicted to the euphoric high that came with a fresh sacrifice, preferring to remain in their druglike state than resist arrest.

The man before Viri was neither a novice nor an addict—­he clearly knew how to use his stolen magic, and he’d also had physical training. That made him dangerous.

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