Onyx Storm, and author Rebecca Yarros.Photo:Entangled: Red Tower Books; CJ Rivera/Invision/AP

Entangled: Red Tower Books; CJ Rivera/Invision/AP
Nothing can stealOnyx Storm’s thunder!Bestselling authorRebecca Yarros' newest addition toThe Empyreanseries hit the shelves on Jan. 21, and less than two weeks later, theNew York Timesreported a stunning 2.7 million copies ofOnyx Stormsold in its first week. This makes the third book in the series the fastest-selling adult novel in two decades, the outlet reported.Fans of Yarros’Fourth WingandIron Flame, the first and second books in the series, have been salivating for the next step in Violet’s gripping journey. The books follow protagonist Violet Sorrengail as she explores love in a world of dragon riders, and her adventures are expected to persist into a fourth and fifth novel to round outThe Empyreanseries.The Empyrean series: Iron Flame, Fourth Wing and Onyx Storm.Entangled: Red Tower Books (3)Onyx Storm’s success also highlights the stratospheric rise of the romantasy genre — a healthy blend of mystical and steamy elements in a single plotline — which garnered around 30 million sales in 2024, the NYT reported.The genre is comparatively new to Yarros, who wrote around 20 bestselling romance books prior toThe Empyreanseries. But the combination of love and magic — her “first loves” — always made sense to her, Yarrospreviously told PEOPLE.“I couldn’t write the fantasy without writing the romance,” she said. “The romance is really what causes you to focus inward on internal conflict and character struggles. And it makes an even richer fantasy when you go back to it.“Moderator Laurie Hernandez discussing with Rebecca Yarros her new Onyx Storm.CJ Rivera/Invision/APNever miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer , from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.“I get to balance both, so I honestly can’t imagine ever giving either genre up. They each enrich the other so very much that it would be impossible to let either of them go,” she added. “Writing contemporary allows me to just let my brain go and really explore internal conflicts. And of course, love, because if it doesn’t have love, I’m not interested.”The Empyreanseries is on sale now, wherever books are sold.
Nothing can stealOnyx Storm’s thunder!
Bestselling authorRebecca Yarros' newest addition toThe Empyreanseries hit the shelves on Jan. 21, and less than two weeks later, theNew York Timesreported a stunning 2.7 million copies ofOnyx Stormsold in its first week. This makes the third book in the series the fastest-selling adult novel in two decades, the outlet reported.
Fans of Yarros’Fourth WingandIron Flame, the first and second books in the series, have been salivating for the next step in Violet’s gripping journey. The books follow protagonist Violet Sorrengail as she explores love in a world of dragon riders, and her adventures are expected to persist into a fourth and fifth novel to round outThe Empyreanseries.
The Empyrean series: Iron Flame, Fourth Wing and Onyx Storm.Entangled: Red Tower Books (3)

Entangled: Red Tower Books (3)
Onyx Storm’s success also highlights the stratospheric rise of the romantasy genre — a healthy blend of mystical and steamy elements in a single plotline — which garnered around 30 million sales in 2024, the NYT reported.
The genre is comparatively new to Yarros, who wrote around 20 bestselling romance books prior toThe Empyreanseries. But the combination of love and magic — her “first loves” — always made sense to her, Yarrospreviously told PEOPLE.
“I couldn’t write the fantasy without writing the romance,” she said. “The romance is really what causes you to focus inward on internal conflict and character struggles. And it makes an even richer fantasy when you go back to it.”
Moderator Laurie Hernandez discussing with Rebecca Yarros her new Onyx Storm.CJ Rivera/Invision/AP
CJ Rivera/Invision/AP
Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer , from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
“I get to balance both, so I honestly can’t imagine ever giving either genre up. They each enrich the other so very much that it would be impossible to let either of them go,” she added. “Writing contemporary allows me to just let my brain go and really explore internal conflicts. And of course, love, because if it doesn’t have love, I’m not interested.”
The Empyreanseries is on sale now, wherever books are sold.
source: people.com