Fury cover

Fury

Unbound • Book 4

4.44 Goodreads
(4.7K ratings)

Why You'll Love This

The tower is rubble, the city is fracturing, and Felix is done playing defense — book four is where the Unbound series fully unleashes.

  • Great if you want: faction warfare, power escalation, and a protagonist who pushes back hard
  • The experience: relentless and propulsive — 883 pages that don't drag
  • The writing: Gonnella builds momentum through escalating stakes and tight, purposeful action sequences
  • Skip if: you haven't read the earlier Unbound books — this won't stand alone

About This Book

There are moments in a fantasy series when the world the author has been building finally breaks open — and Fury is that moment for the Unbound series. Felix Nevarre stands in the wreckage of everything he helped destroy, with a fractured city around him, factions sharpening their knives, and monsters flooding the streets. The stakes here aren't abstract; they're immediate, personal, and grinding. Gonnella doesn't let Felix coast on his victories — power accumulated is power tested, and the question driving this book isn't whether Felix is strong enough, but whether strength alone is ever actually enough.

At 883 pages, Fury earns its length. Gonnella writes action with unusual clarity — combat sequences that feel tactical rather than chaotic, with consequences that ripple forward rather than reset. But what distinguishes this installment is the shift in scale: from individual survival toward something that looks uncomfortably like leadership, ideology, and responsibility. The prose stays lean even as the world grows more complex, and the pacing rewards readers who have invested in the series while still delivering the propulsive momentum that made earlier entries so compulsively readable.