Ghosts of Koa is utterly enthralling, go read it!
There are so many layers and agendas to pull you through the pages. Whether the manipulative Azures, the terrifying creatures called the Ninkashi, the appalling tactics used by the Koan (terrorists? freedom fighters? I'm undecided) --I can go on. It's refreshing to see an author unleash her creativity, instead of relying on tropes we've all seen before.
Balancing over this boiling stew is our hero Zeika. She's a feisty young whip constantly doing whatever it takes to keep her family from drowning in a society that's splintering under the weight of war and magic. Her activities--gun running, among other things--play a pivotal role in this mess. I can't wait to see if Zeika's somehow going to pull it all together or toss gas on the fire. This story gets dark, but Rice renders a beautiful counterpoint in Zeika's tender vigilance over her adorable baby sister, Manja.
The world building really shines in Rice's work. How she blends this post-dystopia with full tilt magic users, demons, and the nuanced political landscape of the Demesnes and Civic and Alchemic orders, I have no clue. I urge you to just sit back and drink it in. This surreal place rests quietly on the bones of what once was, and Rice allows a few hints of the past to trickle through--you'll greedily file them away and keep reading. This is the kind of story where you need to pay attention. It's fresh ground and delectably unpredictable. You'll be rewarded when those quiet clues you've been hoarding come back to be of major importance.
So I won't just endlessly gush. Be ready for some POV shifts --you know the ones!-- where you're excited to flip to the next chapter for what's next and the story jumps to a different character's eyes. Then you settle into THAT character's story, and the author switches gears again. I love/hate that. Thanks, Rice! But the stories around Caleb, the Azure cop who takes an interest in Zeika's welfare; and Xakiah, the lunatic mercenary with a freaky pet shadow (aka an "Echo," I desperately want one) will pull you in just as quickly. Rice has thrown the rule book out, and I could care less. I'm hooked, and eager to read the next installment.