

Shadow and Bone has all the trappings of a debut novel. Shadow and Bone is primarily concerned with Ravkan politics and what it means to be a Grisha, which is interesting on its own, but Six of Crows expands on the universe, and Bardugo’s world-building gets a chance to shine.īut starting with Six of Crows also makes sense because the Crows duology is just objectively better writing. Additionally, Six of Crows steps out into the world beyond Ravka. Their characters will make more sense in the show with the background of the book, and the chance to see their future adventures in the existing books makes their storyline in the series more interesting. Newbies starting to read the series with Six of Crows after watching the show won’t be lost, since out of the six “Crows,” five of them - Kaz, his right-hand knife-wielding spy Inej, sharpshooter Jesper, Ravkan spy Nina, and Fjerdan soldier (and hunter of Grisha) Matthias - appeared in season 1 of the TV series. Why else would the Crows characters be roped into the show, even though they don’t canonically appear in the first books? I have no hard empirical data on this, but I would hazard a guess that Six of Crows is more popular than the main trilogy. The duology takes place two years after the events of the first trilogy, but the first book doesn’t really contain any spoilers for what happens to Shadow and Bone’s Alina, the Darkling, and the rest of the Ravka crew. It focuses on a band of criminals led by the cunning Kaz Brekker as they pull off a grand heist. Six of Crows is the first book in Bardugo’s spinoff duology.


It isn’t a particularly controversial method, by any means, but for those unfamiliar with the books, I am here to be your Grisha guide.Īnd with that: Start with Six of Crows. But you know how some Star Wars fans recommend a non-intuitive order to watch the movies? I’m about to suggest a similar strategy for diving into the Grishaverse books. Or even the first trilogy.īut wait, you might ask yourself, is that not the book that the show is based on? Isn’t it the first book of the series? The one that sets the stage for everything else? The one that introduces the Grisha, Sun Summoner Alina Starkov, and the swath of sentient darkness that tears Ravka in half? Isn’t season 2 going to adapt the second book? Here’s some unsolicited advice: Don’t start with the first novel, Shadow and Bone. If you’re super excited about season 2 of Netflix’s Shadow and Bone series and you’ve never read the Leigh Bardugo books it’s based on, you might be thinking about trying the main trilogy the show adapts.
