Tuesday, April 16, 2024

#Review - The Order of Blood and Ruin by K.M. Shea #Paranormal #Fantasy

Series:
 Magic on Main Street # 3
Format: Kindle, 495 pages
Release Date: April 5, 2024
Publisher: K.M. Shea
Source: Kindle Unlimited
Genre: Urban Fantasy

They used to be enemies. Now they’re partners.

I never imagined Considine Maledictus—one of the most powerful vampires alive—would go from ruling the streets at night to joining the supernatural task force just to become my partner, but here we are.

Considine claims he “fancies” me. He also used to hide his identity and pose as my charming next-door neighbor, so forgive me if I don’t believe him.

As bad as that is, my work life is worse.

My slayer identity—kept a secret since a lone slayer is an easy target—has been leaked by a suspect from a previous case. This brings a new level of danger to my job, especially since the suspect is obviously holding a grudge against me.

But I’m more worried about my city. Bad things are going down, and whatever is stirring in the shadows is more than I can handle alone. Can I trust Considine to watch my back when he used to be the biggest threat to my life?

And why is it that despite everything that has happened, a part of me wonders if it’s possible for a slayer and vampire to be together…


The Order of Blood and Ruin is the final book in the Magic on Main Street urban fantasy trilogy and is part of the Magiford Supernatural City world. This series is packed with humor, magical fights, and a sweet, slow-burn romance between a slayer who battles social anxiety and a vampire who is sick of his immortality. The story alternates between Jade O'Neill, a vampire slayer nicknamed Blood, and Considine Maledictus, a vampire elder nicknamed Ruin.

Considine is so powerful that even his own people, as well as slayers, stay as far as they can away from him. Jade, meanwhile, joined the Magical Response Task Force because she wanted to prove to other supernaturals as well as her own family of slayers that she could protect, not just kill. Jade has tried so very hard to become a solid member of the team and has slowly earned the position of leader of her own Team Blood which seems to always get the most dangerous jobs possible including standing in the way of a Fae war. 

At the end of the previous installment, Jade and Considine were named as permanent partners because of the dangerous threats posed by dragon shifter Gisila who now knows Jade's real identity without her mask after a violent confrontation. Meanwhile, Considine has made it his mission to impress upon Jade that she is his, no matter what her issues with her social anxiety, or her own family have to say, and she will not go anywhere without his protection since nobody would be foolish to attack her with him around. 

After Gisila does make her much-anticipated move thanks to an oracles' prophecy, Considine finds himself captured and taken off the playing field leaving Jade unprotected. Jade has no choice but to call for a Slayer Stake to find Considine and stop Gisila. This is the first time that Jade's entire family, as well as other slayers from around the country, will show up and follow Jade's directions. This puts Jade in a powerful position where she can either rise to the top or fall hard and fail owing favors to anyone who responds to her call.

This book has plenty of action, and there are lots of humorous moments as Jade finds herself in such uncomfortable positions like meeting the vampires Considine swore to protect, as well Killian Drake's One, Hazel Medeis, who has been trying to get rid of House Tellier after all the trouble they've been causing, as well as Jade's own neighbors who are thrilled that Jade has finally found someone. Considine's careless attitude about what others think of what he's doing, paired with Jade's extremely disciplined military-like mannerisms is so endearingly amusing. 




Monday, April 15, 2024

#Review - Fate Breaker by Victoria Aveyard #Fantasy (Epic)

Series:
 Realm Breaker # 3
Format: Hardcover, 640 pages
Release Date: January 31, 2024
Publisher: HarperTeen
Source: Library
Genre: Epic Fantasy

The final installment in Victoria Aveyard’s New York Times bestselling Realm Breaker series pits good against evil for the fate of the realm, featuring more of the breathless action, deadly twists, and amazing cast of characters that has made this series perfect for fans of Leigh Bardugo and Tolkien himself.

Change your fate—or kneel to it.

The Companions are scattered and hopeless, torn from each other. After Corayne barely escapes with her life, she must forge on alone, leaving her blade broken and her allies behind her. Her only consolation—Corayne now has Taristan's sword, the only Spindleblade left in existence. Without it, he can’t rip open any more Spindles. Without it, he can’t end the world.

But Taristan and Queen Erida will not be defeated so easily. Both will burn the world to bring down Corayne—and bring forth their demon god, What Waits, ready to claim the realm of Allward for his own. 

In a final clash between kingdoms and gods, all must rise to fight—or be destroyed. 


Fate Breaker, by Victoria Aveyard, is the third and final installment in the author's Realm Breaker trilogy. Everything has come to this. Prepare for a larger-than-life, unforgettable finale to the instant New York Times bestselling Realm Breaker series, where a shattered alliance must rise from the ashes to make their final stand against a ruthless enemy…and the demon god who looks to shroud the entire world in darkness. Key Characters: Corayne, Domacridhan, Sorasa, Andry, Sigil, Charlie, Garion, Valtik, Erida, and Taristan.

Ever since the failed battle of Gidaston, where a key character fell to the undead hordes led by Taristan, the Companions are scattered and hopeless, torn from each other. After Corayne (The Hope for the Realm) barely escapes with her life, she must forge on alone, leaving her blade broken and her allies behind her until she finds her way to the fabled land of the Elders. Her only consolation—Corayne now has Taristan's sword, the only Spindleblade left in existence. Without it, he can’t rip open any more Spindles. Without it, he can’t end the world. 

Now, from every corner of the realm, the Companions race to reunite while they rally old allies and seek unexpected new ones, including Corayne's pirate mother Meliz an-Amarat, in one final push against darkness. But Taristan and Erida are all but invincible. With their cruel god, What Waits, on their side, they will sacrifice anything and anyone to his hunger. Erida is now clearly hearing the voice of her new master, and nothing it seems, will be able to stop her. Not even legendary Jydi Raiders and immortal Elders. 

Good faces evil one final time…but will our Companions be triumphant? Or will the realm fall to evil? Readers can expect a thrilling and action-packed end to this dynamic series—complete with plenty of Victoria Aveyard’s infamous twists, which will have readers on the edge of their seats right down to the final page. The Realm Breaker series has all the touchstones that made Victoria’s previous books an instant hit—complex worlds, sweeping plots, nonstop action, engaging prose, and relatable characters—with life-or-death stakes that bring this series to an entirely new level. 

Take a group of strangers and make them work together to save the world…easy, right? Fans have enjoyed this cast of characters of lovable, grumpy, trigger-happy heroes, and will be thrilled to follow their ride-or-die favorites as they fight, banter, and even fall in love through this finale. Starting in the first book, we met Queen Erida, who would do anything for power…and Taristan, who will do anything to give it to her. They are steamy, ferocious, and downright villainous—admittedly one of Victoria Aveyard’s favorite couples to write!

As Corayne and her companions travel to new lands, encounter unique dangers, and build an army to defeat the evil king, it is more essential than ever that they work together to save their worldCorayne is pushed to her limits, grappling with destiny and the immense weight of the world resting squarely on her shoulders. There are some really curious dynamics at work in this story. Corayne and Andry. "With Me!" Dom and Sorasa? Wow, didn't see that relationship grow to what it became. Okay, yes, Erida and Taristan had a strange but strong relationship. Especially at the end. I smiled when Corayne and her mother reunited. Meliz's actions really changed the course of this story and the fight against Erida's forces. 




Friday, April 12, 2024

#Review - The Book That Broke the World by Mark Lawrence #Fantasy #Romance

Series:
 The Library Trilogy # 2
Format: Hardcover, 384 pages
Release Date: April 9, 2024
Publisher: ACE
Source: Publisher
Genre: Fantasy / Romance

Two people living in a world connected by a vast and mysterious library must fight for those they love in the second book in a new trilogy from the international bestselling author of The Book That Wouldn’t Burn.

The Library spans worlds and times. It touches and joins distant places. It is memory and future. And amid its vastness Evar Eventari, both found and lost, Livira Page.

Evar has been forced to flee the library, driven before an implacable foe. Livira, trapped in a ghost world, has to recover the book she wrote—one which is the only true threat to the library’s existence—if she's to return to her life.

While Evar's journey leads him outside into the vastness of a world he's never seen, Livira's path will take her deep inside her own writing, where she must wrestle with her stories in order to reclaim the volume in which they were written. 

The secret war that defines the library has chosen its champions and set them on the board. The time has come when they must fight for what they believe, or lose everything.


“There is a book that is also a loop. A book that has swallowed its own tale. It is a ring, a cycle, burning through the years, spreading cracks through time, fissures that reach into its past and future. And through those cracks things that have no business in the world of flesh can escape.”

The Book That Broke the World, by Mark Lawrence, is the second installment in the author's The Library Trilogy. Key Characters: Evar, Livara, Arpix, Celcha, and Hellet. Long ago, a lie was told, and with the passing years it has grown and spread, a small push leading to a chain of desperate consequences. Now, as one edifice topples into the next with ever-growing violence, it threatens to break the world. The secret war that defines the library has chosen its champions and set them on the board. The time has come when they must fight for what they believe, or lose everything.

Livira, who grew up in a place called The Dust, but was rescued by soldiers, is a librarian who trying to find her way home to her family, as well as find Evar. As the story opens, Livira and Malar (soldier) are together but nobody can see them because they are pretty much ghosts to everyone else. Livera is also trying to find a book she wrote, which could possibly be a true threat to the library’s existence. 

Evar, who was trapped with his adopted siblings for a very long time, was raised by the Assistant and Soldier who we learn are some characters we already know thanks to the Library's Mechanism of traveling through doors and different times and places. He, along with his warrior sister Clovis is determined to find Livira. Clovis is an amazing and tough warrior, but curiously finds herself falling for the human boy Aprix who once trained Livara even though they are different species. 

Celcha was born into slavery along with her brother Hellet. Their job was to dig into a lost city to find lost books. er as they head into the Library world. It appears that Hellet was being tempted by either ghosts or angels into doing something dangerous that would eventually lead to the destruction of the city that exists outside of the Library. The most curious aspect of Celcha was that she was pushed into doing something really awful, and wasn't aware that she was being used by people who wanted to destroy the Library. 

Arpix is a librarian who also tutored Livira. He and other survivors ended up in the Dust where Livira once lived, and it seems that they have been there for a while. Wentworth (a huge cat, who can find anyone), was a terrific addition to the book. Especially after you learn that he has been providing much needed food for Arpix and his group as well as fighting monsters called Skeers.

Behind the scenes, there is a war brewing. A war that has been thousands of years in the making thanks to two brothers. It is at this point I shall just say that the key characters must now decide which side they are on, and which doorway they will take to meet their own fates including fighting a cannibalistic King, and the rotten to the core Lord Algar who really truly hates Livara. 

*Facts* The Library Trilogy revolves around the Athenaeum, the legendary library instituted by Irad, the grandson of Cain and the great-grandson of Adam and Eve. Following the family tradition, Irad argued bitterly with his own brother, Jaspeth, who believed Irad’s library to be a temple glorifying the original sin of knowledge and was determined to tear it down. The Library has become a literal and figurative battleground over who controls access to knowledge or whether information should be passed down at all. The Library Trilogy is about many things: adventure, discovery, and romance, but it's also a love letter to books and the places where they live. The focus is on one vast and timeless library, but the love expands to encompass smaller more personal collections, and bookshops of all shades too. 





Wednesday, April 10, 2024

#Review - The Hemlock Queen by Hannah F. Whitten #Fantasy #Romance

Series:
 The Nightshade Crown # 2
Format: Hardcover, 480 pages
Release Date: April 9, 2024
Publisher: Orbit
Source: Publisher
Genre: Fantasy / Romance

In the second installment of New York Times bestselling author Hannah Whitten’s lush romantic epic fantasy series, the glittering and dangerous world of the Sainted King’s royal court is upended when Prince Bastian seizes control and a mysterious dark force begins to take over.

The corrupt king August is dead. Prince Bastian has seized the throne and raised Lore—a necromancer and former smuggler—to his right-hand side. Together they plan to cut out the rot from the heart of the royal court and help the people of Dellaire. But not everyone is happy with the changes. The nobles are sowing dissent, the Kirythean Empire is beating down their door, and Lore’s old allies are pulling away. Even Prince Bastian has changed. No longer the hopeful, rakish, charismatic man Lore knows and loves, instead he’s become reckless, domineering, and cold.

And something has been whispering in her ear. A voice, dark and haunting, that’s telling her there’s more to the story than she knows and more to her power than she can even imagine. A truth buried deep that could change everything.

With Bastian’s coronation fast approaching and enemies whispering on all sides, Lore must figure out how to protect herself, her prince, and her country before they all come crumbling down and whatever dark power has been creeping through the catacombs is unleashed.

Hannah F. Whitten's The Hemlock Queen is the second installment in the authors The Nightshade Crown series. It has been 3 weeks since the end of the first installment. The corrupt king August is dead. Prince Bastian has seized the throne and raised Lore—a drug dealer turned court lady and part-time theologian with a unique power over death and life—to his right hand side as his Queen. Together they plan to cut out the rot from the heart of the sainted court and help the people of Dellaire. 

But not everyone is happy with the changes and Lore takes a backseat for the most part not wanting to be the center of any attention because of her ability to raise the dead. The nobles are sowing dissent, the Kyrithean Empire is beating down their door, and Lore's old allies are pulling away. Even Prince Bastian's changed which apparently has to do with a certain God wanting to take control. Make that two Gods since one just happens to have chosen Lore as a bulwark against Bastian's Apollius.

No longer the hopeful, rakish, charismatic man Lore knows and loves, instead he's reckless, domineering and cold. And something's been whispering in her ear. A voice, dark and haunting, that's telling her there's more to the story than she knows and more to her power than she can even imagine. Even Gabe, who lost his eye, is now a different person. He seems to understand what is going on, but it takes him and Lore a long time to make any sort of plan to do anything. He also seems to find himself in a twisted triangle which I loathe. 

A truth buried deep that could change everything. With Bastian's coronation fast approaching and enemies whispering on all sides, Lore must figure out how to protect herself, her prince, and her country before they all come crumbling down and whatever dark power has been creeping through the catacombs is unleashed. Not going to lie, while the worldbuilding is pretty good, the overall storyline is filled with secrets, betrayal, and yet another stunning ending. 




Tuesday, April 9, 2024

#Review - A Promise of Peridot by Kate Golden #Fantasy #Romance

Series:
 The Sacred Stones Trilogy # 2
Format: Paperback, 480 pages
Release Date: April 9, 2024
Publisher: Berkley
Source: Publisher
Genre: Fantasy / Romance

A prophecy of death. A weapon of hope. A sacrifice of love.

Arwen Valondale is sailing for the mysterious Kingdom of Citrine after the battle of Siren’s Bay. Reeling from shocking revelations and her newfound powers, Arwen directs all of her pain and rage toward the man who betrayed her: King Kane Ravenwood.

Kane’s presence is unavoidable as he travels with Arwen and her friends to seek the Blade of the Sun, a legendary weapon inextricably tied to her fate and the future of the realm. Even an uneasy truce proves difficult as Arwen fights against her unresolved feelings for Kane, who is willing to become darkness itself to protect her. 

As Arwen faces creatures, foes, and magic beyond her wildest imaginings, she must discover the secrets of her past to defeat the monstrous Fae king Lazarus. But finding the light within might mean the death of her and everyone she loves.


Kate Golden's A Promise of Peridot is the second installment in the authors The Sacred Stones Trilogy. Key Characters: Arwen Valondale, and King Kane Ravenwood. The heroine is in her early twenties, and the slow-burn romance makes this perfect for new adult fans. Following the dramatic conclusion of A Dawn of Onyx, would-be lovers Arwen and Kane are at odds, but their destiny to save the world remains unchanged.

Golden pulls from the best of the best tropes with a Chosen One prophecy, enemies-to-lovers romance, and a forced-proximity, fae-vs-humans storyline. It has been 10 days since the losing battle of Siren's Cove. Arwen, Kane, Griffin, Dagan, Mari and the rest of their group escape to find a sanctuary, which leads them to Citrine, in hope of finding some allies to defeat the Fae King Lazarus. On their journey, they are joined by Prince Fedrik who is an unlikely thorn in Kane's side. 

Reeling from shocking revelations and her newfound powers of healing, Arwen directs all of her pain and rage toward the man who betrayed her: King Kane Ravenwood of Onyx. There is a lot of tension between Arwen and Kane after the shocking secrets Arwen learned at the battle of Siren’s Cove, but being forced to work and travel with Kane makes it hard for Arwen to remain angry at him and to keep hating him. There is also tension between others including Mari who learns a few things about herself. 

Kane's presence is unavoidable as he travels with Arwen and her friends to seek the Blade of the Sun, a legendary weapon inextricably tied to her fate and the future of the realm. Even an uneasy truce proves difficult as Arwen fights against her unresolved feelings for Kane, who is willing to become darkness itself to protect her. There is a whole lot of traveling in this story. From Citrine, back to Peridot, and Onyx where Arwen must face her fate. 

Arwen (the last full fae blooded born) is destined to kill Lazarus, but accepting her fate in a prophecy meant to be her doom.  As Arwen faces creatures, foes, betrayal, and magic beyond her wildest dreams, she must discover the secrets of her past to defeat the monstrous Fae king Lazarus, while also learning to forgive and open her heart to Kane. But finding the light within might mean the death of her and everyone she loves. 

*Thoughts* This book ends on a stunning cliffhanger ending which I am not going to speak about because you could almost see it coming a mile away. I'm not a fan of self-fulfilling prophecies where the lead character seemingly has a death wish. Could it be possible that the author is setting up Mari and Griffin for the next power couple? That is if Mari can get out of her own way and stop using magic as a crutch. There are some steamy sex scenes in this story which fits in with the New Adult Romantasy genre. The author actually uses dual narratives this time which is actually a good thing because of what happens. 


1

arwen

I'm going to be sick again," warned Ryder as he hung his head over the wet steel edge of the ship. Angry droplets of rain pelted us both as I rubbed soothing circles into the damp fabric clinging to my brother's back.

"I'm here," I said, trying to send lighte into his knotted stomach. I waited, and waited some more, until I couldn't help but tense my fingers against the void I felt where my lighte should have regenerated days ago.

Nothing.

Still nothing.

Ryder retched into the churning sea below us.

In the ten days since the battle of Siren's Bay, I had healed the entire ship of all their wounds without my power. The injuries inflicted by Lazarus's army, burns singed and gashes slashed by both lighte and Fae weapons, were more damaging to the Onyx and Peridot soldiers than any mortal steel. It had been the most taxing work I'd ever done.

And all the while, elbow-deep in bandages and sickly, fevered sweat, I tried to grieve.

We had held a small, makeshift funeral for her-the woman I had always thought was my mother. Against the rhythmic creaking of ropes and the quiet flapping of sails, the unscathed soldiers aboard had lowered her body into the sea beneath us. I said a few words, all of which felt flat and foreign in my mouth. Mari sang a hymn. Ryder cried. Leigh didn't look at any of us, and then slunk into our cabin belowdecks before we even finished.

It had been awful.

Kane had asked if he could join us. I believe his words were, "I'd like to be there for you, if you'll let me." As if his presence might have somehow made me feel better, instead of infinitely, infinitely worse. I hadn't wanted him anywhere near my family. Or what had been left of them.

Then, the storm came.

A thunderous assault of rain, with waves that sloshed against the ship like battering rams. It raged and raged throughout our entire journey. Those who sought even a minute's reprieve from stale cabin air were immediately soaked in a frigid deluge. Yesterday the captain had rationed the ship's coals, leaving us without hot water. I already couldn't stomach any more lukewarm porridge.

I looked down at my fingers on Ryder's back. They were eternally pruned, like little raisins. He heaved again, and down the bow a couple feet, a Peridot woman in a weather-beaten wool cloak followed suit.

Though I was lucky not to suffer from seasickness, the same couldn't be said for the rest of the passengers. The stomach-turning sounds of retching echoed at all hours of the day and night. I offered care to whomever I could, but without my lighte there wasn't much to do.

I hadn't offered any help to Kane, though.

I'd watched him climb a rickety set of stairs with ease a single day after being pierced through the chest by a spear of ice. He'd scaled them two at a time-nimble, strong, lively even.

And yet, he had needed me to heal him so critically that day in the Shadowhold infirmary?

All lies. More and more lies. My head swam with them.

I waited for the instinctual rush of fear to ripple through me when I thought of the fate he'd kept from me all those months. The prophecy that foretold my death at Kane's own father's hands. But I felt nothing.

I had felt nothing for days.

After a lifetime of too much fear and tears and worry-now I couldn't muster anything at all.

With one final dry heave, Ryder slumped down against the metal and sucked in a deep breath. "That has to be the last of it. There's nothing left in my stomach to vomit up."

I frowned. "A lovely mental image."

His answering smile was weak.

But in my mind a memory was unfurling. One of a slow autumn evening-silent save for the sounds of wind rustling among the weeds outside my home. I'd been sick after eating something moldy-Powell's leave no scrap behind mentality at work-and my mother had rubbed my back in steady sweeps, calming me as I purged. I could have healed myself then, but chose not to. I liked how it felt to have her comfort me. I liked her hand on my shoulder, her quieting words. Leigh had been born recently, and both Ryder and I missed being the sole objects of her affection.

It was such a selfish, childish thing to do. To retch for an hour rather than heal my own illness just to keep her by my side in the chilly evening air, away from her new baby, husband, and son.

But it felt so good to be cared for.

And now-

Now I fell asleep every night wondering who the woman even was.

Had she found me on the road one day?

Had someone forced her to raise me?

And if so, where in the world were my real parents? They were both full-blooded Fae, so most likely living in another realm. A melting one of parched earth and ash, governed by a tyrant-

"Feeling any better?"

My attention snapped to Mari, wandering over wrapped in a thick fur cloak. She'd raided the ship on our first night and somehow found the most fashionable pieces aboard. But even her elegant new pelt couldn't hide the way her copper hair clung in wet ringlets to her face or the icy drops that showered her nose and near-blue lips.

At the sight of her, Ryder straightened and folded his hands confidently across his chest. "Right as this rain. Barely even sick." He inclined his head toward the Peridot woman still heaving down the deck. "It's all these other folk I feel sorry for."

"He vomited the entire contents of his stomach out and then some," I said to Mari.

Ryder glared at me, and Mari gave him a compassionate frown. "Sorry to hear it. This storm is unrelenting."

"Yeah, well-" We sailed over another swell and Ryder turned pale, clutching at his stomach. "I . . . I am going to go talk to someone about that. Right now." He dashed for the other end of the ship and out of eyesight.

Mari lifted a brow at me. "Talk to someone . . . about the storm?"

I shook my head. "He's too proud."

"I think it's sweet that he's embarrassed. Here." She produced a small glass vial from her skirts. "Give him this. It's Steel of the Stomach."

"Isn't that potion used for undertakers?" After I'd read the book on flower species I got from the Peridot library twice, I had started working through Mari's grimoires out of sheer boredom. She didn't have much use for them anymore anyway. Not now that she had the amulet.

I didn't blame her. Mari never learned to wield her magic properly after her mother, the only living witch in her family, had died in childbirth. The necklace that we stole from Kane's study, the one that belonged to Briar Creighton, the supposed most powerful witch of all time, allowed her to harness her power-and quite a bit of it. Now she did magic whenever and however she pleased. And the amulet never left her neck.

Mari shrugged, pawing absently at the violet charm as it hung below her collarbone. "I figured it might help him. It was easy to brew."

The only issue was that she wasn't actually pulling any power from Briar or her lineage. I replayed the moment in which Kane told me the amulet was merely a trinket-that all the spells Mari cast with such ease these days were her own-and fished for guilt. I owed her the truth, but I only found a well of apathy where my ethics used to be. I didn't want to lie to her, but-

But I just didn't have the energy.

"Have you talked to Kane at all today?" she asked, gripping the slick bow as the ship pitched over another uneasy wave.

I sighed, a long and thorough noise. Another thing I couldn't bring myself to do. "No."

"What if there's another way? Hadn't he said as much?"

He had, the last time we spoke. After the battle. After my mother's death. After my outburst of power and butchery. Kane had said he was willing to let the entire continent fall to Lazarus to save me from my death sentence. To help me live my life in peace.

But what kind of "peace" could I find knowing how many would suffer at Lazarus's hands because I was holed away in some idyllic city, nameless and hiding from my fate?

"There's nothing he can help me do but run."

Mari pursed her lips. "Perhaps but . . . He knows more about this prophecy than anyone. Can't you try to have a little hope?"

"I just need off this boat," I said, staring up into the heavy, rumbling storm clouds above.

"I know." She sighed. "This journey has been miserable."

But I wasn't thinking of the rain or the cold or the vomiting. Only getting Leigh and Ryder safely to Citrine, and myself as far from Kane as possible. Somewhere I could be alone until I was needed. A sacrificial lamb, awaiting slaughter.

So I stayed silent as the rain battered my face, searching my heart for an ache, for hope, for even a trill of fear at the thought of my horrific future.

But I found nothing.

I missed my mother.

I wanted to go home.

I wanted to sleep for a long, long time.

"Why won't anyone tell us what awaits us in Citrine?" I hadn't talked to many people the last ten days, but the lieutenants and nobles that were on the ship with us had been very tight-lipped about the secretive kingdom. All we were told was that it was impossible to breach, and therefore about as safe from Lazarus as we could get.

Mari shrugged. "All the texts I've come across just say it's hard to access. On most maps it's either floating in the middle of the Mineral Sea or left off altogether."

I let the ocean's swell rock me while Mari tightened her grip on the wet steel.

"Could it be an island? Like Jade?" The Jade Islands were an equally mysterious kingdom, but at least Mari knew some people who had traveled there and said it was uninhabited.

"Possibly. I guess we'll find out soon enough." Her eyes shone with anticipation. The discovery of something still unknown. "Do you want to go down to the mess? Have some dinner?"

I looked up at the furious sky, purple and blue and gray. Like a bruise, or a mottled pigeon's wing. Heavy, rhythmless droplets landed on my face. "No, I think I'll stay out here for a while." When she frowned, I amended my voice to sound warmer. "But I'll meet you in there." I was doing the best I could, and Mari knew it.

She flitted off with the same spritely energy she always had, rain or shine. The girl was resilient-it seemed nothing, not even the recent battle, pounding storm, or pitching ship could break her spirit.

Heavy footfalls dragged my gaze over to a group crossing the scarred deck.

I knew those boots. That walk.

Kane strode toward the galley alongside Griffin, with Leigh in tow behind them.

The weakest flame of fury, barely a spark, lit in my chest at the sight of him.

His sable hair was wet and plastered against his forehead and the back of his neck. His eyes were ringed in gray from an obvious lack of sleep. A scratchy-looking beard covered his jaw, and he had a swollen face from days and nights of too much drink.

The man was a disheveled mess.

Often I'd hear him, Griffin, and Amelia drinking together into the late hours of the night through the thin walls of my cabin. Laughing, playing cards, singing poorly-any part of me that flared up in vague jealousy at Kane and Amelia's drunken joy I attributed to muscle memory. Sometimes, Mari and Ryder would join them out of boredom. That hurt even more.

I told myself it was a benefit, to feel anything at all.

But Leigh . . . her newly developed bond with Kane had proven to be the most irritating. I would catch them sneaking into restricted sections of the ship, returning with pilfered treats and rusted treasures. I'd hear him tell her of twisted, snarling creatures from lands beyond her wildest imagination. She seemed more than a little enamored of him.

I understood the feeling.

I had been naive and gullible, too, once.

I motioned over to her with a wave. Leigh's curls bobbed against her too-large gray cloak as she said something to the hulking men who walked beside her. They looked like her guard dogs-tall and imposing and powerful. Soaked in rain and scowling. When she strode over to me and they descended down the galley steps, I exhaled.

"What are you doing with those two? They're dangerous Fae, Leigh. Not playmates."

She rolled her eyes.

My skin itched. "What?"

"You're being so hard on him."

She was colder, more serious these days. I understood her pain, and I was trying to be patient, but all her rage seemed directed only at me.

I crouched down to meet her eyeline. "I know you're going through an impossible time. I miss her too."

"This isn't about Mother."

"But your anger . . ." I reached for her, grasping her arm. "I think it may be coming from-"

She shook me off. "Just stop. You're upset about Mother. You're upset you couldn't save her." She swallowed, her eyes hard on mine. "You're upset about what you are. And you're taking it out on him."

I bit my tongue against the sting of her words.

"I know you think he's charming, Leigh. And you two have this odd little friendship, but he lied to me. He ruined my life." Even as I said the words, they felt hollow. Devoid of emotion. As if I were saying, He lost my parasol. This pitch-black emptiness tunneling inside of me was so foreign I barely recognized myself. "You're too young to understand."

The look she gave me could have frozen the sun itself. "He's barely making it through each day."

"We've listened to him sing sea shanties in the captain's quarters every night. Does he sound broken up to you?"

"He's just trying to survive, like we all are."

As if summoned, Kane climbed back out onto the deck, alone this time, a bottle of whiskey in hand. Our gazes met instantly-I knew he could tell we had been talking about him. I folded my arms and let the ice in my veins reach my face. Kane's brows knit inward slightly before he looked away.




Monday, April 8, 2024

#Review - Knight of the Goddess by Briar Boleyn #Fantasy #Romance

Series:
 Blood of a Fae # 4
Format: Ebook, 410 pages
Release Date: 31 Mar 2024
Publisher: Starwater Press
Source: Publisher
Genre: New Adult / Fantasy / Romance

The fourth and final book in the bestselling Blood of a Fae series…

“I see forever with you by my side. Because long after these scars have faded away to nothing, I'll still be standing beside you. You and I? We're eternal.”

Beware the dread curse of Three…

In the aftermath of the war between Pendrath and its neighbors, peace has finally come to Camelot. But for Morgan Le Fay and her friends, the calm is short-lived. A storm grows on the horizon. As a terrible evil that has been waiting hundreds of years begins to sweep through the land, Morgan and Draven must race to the aid of their allies, leaving their youngest and most vulnerable new family member in the care of trusted friends.

The sword, the spear, the grail’s mystery…

As the tide of war takes them across kingdoms and into greater peril, Morgan and Draven embark on a quest to destroy the three objects of untold power–the grail, the sword, and the spear. Together, the pair will find answers to questions lost in the mists of time. Answers to questions so terrible, they never even thought to ask.

Blood calls to blood, the dark shall rise,

Forged by the gods under sacred skies.

For the love between these bonded mates is not just an everlasting one forged in blood.

You might even call it divine.


Briar Boleyn's Knight of The Goddess is the fourth and final installment in the author's Blood of a Fae series. Key Characters: Morgan le Fay, Kairos Draven Venater, Medra, daughter of Morgan's fallen sister Orcades and former King Arthur, Guinevere (New High Priestess), Lancelot, and Gorlois le Fay, Morgan's father. In the wake of the war that once ravaged Pendrath and its neighboring realms, a fragile peace settles over Camelot. 

Yet, tranquility proves fleeting for Morgan Le Fay and her companions as a sinister force, dormant for centuries, stirs anew, threatening to engulf the land in darkness. Draven is also fighting his own demons, not knowing if his sister Rychel is alive or not. As the tempest gathers strength, Morgan and Draven must hasten to aid their allies, entrusting their youngest and most vulnerable family member to the care of steadfast friends. 

A family member who could be the prophesied destroyer of a powerful God. A family member who will grow so quickly, that it will take the deaths of some major players to make her understand that she was actually loved, and not abandoned to fight a powerful God. Amidst the chaos, the ancient artifacts of power-the grail, the sword, and the spear-loom ominously, their mysteries shrouded in legend. 

To stem the tide of war and confront the encroaching peril, Morgan, Draven, Hawl, Lancelot, & Guinevere embark on a perilous quest to vanquish these relics of untold potency. Along the way, they unearth long-buried truths, delving into the depths of history to confront horrors they never dared imagine! Morgan will also encounter brothers and sisters who she either never met before, or her mother wiped all memories of the family that she was taken from before she could be used in her father's ultimate plans to conquer the world. 

*Thoughts* So, this is a pretty entertaining story and a good way to wrap up the series. I do, however, still have questions as to how Medra was able to grow so quickly from a baby who was left behind by Morgan and Draven who fell in love with her, but to end up as a young teenaged girl with remarkable powers to challenge a God. Was it because of who her mother was, and possibly the same reason why Gorlois wanted Morgan so badly? There are quite a few characters who make the ultimate sacrifice in this story. In that way, it makes the story a bit more realistic than to have everyone survive against tremendous challenges. 



LONG QUOTE 1 

A volley of missiles flew through the air. I could hear Draven shouting to fly low and turn. I could sense Nightclaw was already doing so, moving Draven out of harm's way. But Sunstrike and I were in tune in a different way. The younger battlecat was swift, light, yes, but also inexperienced. She had carried me stoically and willingly this far, but now I sensed her weariness. As I fed her my thoughts, a hand to her fur, I felt her struggle to respond with the speed Nightclaw might have. She turned, ever so slowly as it seemed to me. And then she began to climb, flying higher rather than lower, heading for the clouds. I sensed her newfound fear as the arrows began to hiss around us. But there was nothing for it. I hunched on the great cat's back, my head against her coat, urging her on and praying Draven would cover our retreat. Quick-witted as always, he had already done so. When I looked back over my shoulder, I saw him sculpting a path of safety for us, shadows cloaking our withdrawal as he and Nightclaw sped towards the projectiles and ensnared them, shadows coiling around arrows and missiles, hurling them back down towards the earth. A few moments later, Nightclaw soared beside us. We flew above the clouds, letting Sunstrike get her composure back. I could feel the young battlecat's heart racing and struggled to remind myself she had never been in this sort of fray before. I shouted the thought to Draven over the whistling wind. “She’s never done this before. She’s frightened.” He urged Nightclaw closer until we were flying neck in neck. “I know. We should send her back. Join me on Nightclaw.” It was not a terrible idea. And yet as Sunstrike heard his words, I sensed her immediate reaction. Her utter refusal to return without her mate, to leave us behind. “Not my first battle,” I felt her say, in emotions if not in words. “Not my first. Back on the beach. I helped.” “She did,” Draven said begrudgingly as he understood her message. “But this…” He shook his head. “This is very different.” I looked at Nightclaw, but the cat’s eyes were focused ahead of him. I got the impression he would not tell his mate what to do, but would leave it to her. “She wants to help,” I said carefully. “She’s fast. I can guide her. We’ll just be more careful.” “They’ll be watching for us now,” Draven said grimly. “That large one down below, the general…” “That large what?” I prompted. “What the fuck are these things, Draven? Men? Fae?” Draven shook his head. “Fae, I’d assume. Well-trained, impassive. Very well-controlled.” I snorted. “Impassive? Is that what you’d call it? They’re brutal. Nothing like any human soldiers I’ve seen.” Draven gave me a searching look. “Think of who they work for.” We had never spoken of it outright. But I knew we’d shared the same idea for a long time. “Right,” I said darkly. “It’s probably easy to be impassive when something worse awaits them back home if they fail,” he pointed out. “Why send out those raiding parties if this was what my father had all along?” I demanded. “What was the point?” “To rattle us, to frighten us,” Draven answered. “To test Tintagel’s strength. To see where he should first attack. Tintagel is the closest kingdom after all.” And Pendrath was next closest. Followed by Lyonesse. And then what? Cerunnos? Until all of Eskira was under Valtain control? “Total dominion,” I said miserably. My father must have had this attack already planned out, if not under way, by the time he found me in the dream. “If I had to guess,” Draven said calmly. “I’d say this battle has been a long, long time coming.” He looked over at me. “What’s the plan?” “Get down there and fuck shit up?” I suggested. My father may have been a military mastermind. I had my own style. Blunt and to the point. He grinned. “How elegantly put.” I shrugged. “I’ll use fire. You use… whatever the hell we’re calling what you can do. And we’ll see if we can help out King Mark.” “Shadow wielding. It’s rare but not unheard of.” He sighed. “Fine. But Nightclaw and I will stay close and shield you. If things get too hot, you and Sunstrike head back up into the clouds.” I touched Sunstrike, making sure she understood. She was eager and excited to go back down. But she was a little afraid, too. I knew she’d be more careful. “We’re ready. Let’s go.” We flew to war. The blood-soaked earth stretched out below us like a canvas. Sunstrike flew swiftly. She was young and nimble, if lacking experience. Small flames danced in my hands, ready to unleash on the forces below us. Beside us soared Nightclaw. If Hawl was right, the older exmoor could have been the veteran of countless battles. He moved with a sure and primal grace. Astride him sat my mate, commanding shadows as easily as one might wield a blade. Below us, the dark fae foot soldiers now found themselves confronting forces beyond their darkest imagining.