3.5 stars, really.
The book has an immersive writing style which makes it very easy to fall into it and just want more, more, more. The first scene in particular just draws you right in, with no boring exposition or life-story. Instead, you're right there with Khensa in the burning temple, confused, ignorant, angry and struggling to survive. Khensa's backstory instead comes in little pieces, here and there throughout the story, without resorting to flashback or infodump.
Being self-published, it falls down in a few key areas - proof-reading and cover design are immediately noticable. I also think it could have benefitted from some rigorous professional editing. There were some scenes I felt were unbelievably or awkwardly expressed, and my suspension of disbelief began to fray a bit with the amount of times the characters were involved in life or death situations. Sometimes it seemed as though the only way the author could keep up the tension was to have the characters fight or nearly die, though there were a few extremely emotionally poignant scenes that make me think this is one flaw the author will quickly conquer.
The basic premise is that Khensa, the narrator, is inadvertently rescued from a year of torture and scientific/magic experimentation by Bomani - a Crown Prince who seems to be the black sheep of the family. There's no immediate calm in sight: Bomani and Khensa strike a deal, despite mutual dislike, to help solve each other's problems. Except things begin to go wrong.
I'm hesitant to use the phrase strong female character, but the protagonist is certainly no wimp. Nor does she spend her time whining about how terrible things have happened to her and begging to be rescued. If anything, she seems too feisty at times, hitting out when watching and learning would be a wiser solution.
The other characters are all well-developed, antagonists, love-interest and allies alike. There is nice character development and I particularly like that Khensa is shown to get her impressions of people wrong occassionaly. On the love-interest, I didn't love him at first, but there are a few key scenes in the novel which changed my mind and had me rooting for him. Its subplot is definitely romantic, not sexual, for those of you that like clean romance, and it manages to tug on the heartstrings all the same.
All-in-all, this was a book I couldn't put down, and a definite recommendation to anyone that's looking for an enjoyable light-fantasy/romance. Given it's a debut novel, it makes me look forward to Arreana's future books.