It's coming to my awareness that my favorite books are riddled with about two thousand layers of intrigue and betrayal, machinations, trickles of magic, spies, and a few heartbreaking twists.
Naturally I couldn't put this down.
"Owen Kiskaddon first came to the court of the formidable King Severn as a prisoner, winning favor with the stormy monarch by masquerading as a boy truly blessed by the Fountain. Nine years hence, the once-fearful Owen has grown into a confident young man, mentored in battle and politics by Duke Horwath and deeply in love with his childhood friend, the duke’s granddaughter. But the blissful future Owen and Elysabeth Mortimer anticipate seems doomed by the king’s machinations.
A pretender to Severn’s throne has vowed to seize the crown of Kingfountain. But Severn means to combat the threat by using Elysabeth as bait to snare the imposter—and forcing Owen, as a pawn in the dangerous charade, to choose between duty and devotion. With poisoners and spies circling ominously, and war looming on the horizon, Owen must make painful sacrifices to beat back the advancing shadows of death and disaster. Will Owen’s conflicted heart follow the king’s path or will he risk everything for love?"
My heart was right there with Justine, sobbing at the answer. I am curious to see how this plays out in the next book😳
What else? Owen's power is developing into something that is SO interesting, and I liked how the King's poisoner was brought into the fold of things. The magic Wizr board was also fascinating as is all of the treasure, and insights that Owen can see from the past. I know book 3 is going to answer some of these mysteries and I can't wait.
I looove the characters now too. Owen has transformed into quite the leader and the King's right hand, Evie is the ultimately brave and intelligent woman, Etayne is little weird but a wonderful addition. Clark is a good guy too, I fully wish him the best but I have a strong feeling that Wheeler will eventually kill him off. I hate what Severn is doing to them...how far will his madness and their sense of loyalty stretch?
Things do happen a bit conveniently but thankfully Wheeler is a good enough storyteller that he can get away with telling us what happens, instead of putting the reader in the thick of it. There are definitely some parts where I would have liked to see some of the action though.
I still smashed that 5 star button unashamedly. I couldn't put it down and am invested in EVERYONE. Fully recommend the series for fans of historical fiction, epics, fantasy, I really want to say Christian fiction too because Wheeler writes a very clean message and his characters truly honor each other, and you know he's a man of God as well. Sometimes a religious undertone comes through in his works and his books are totally appropriate for young adult/christian/etc