Second half of a two-part series set in Marloven Hess, 100 years after the Inda series. The first book followed the current king & queen, Arrow and Danet, gaining the throne and attempting to restore peace and order to the kingdom after several bloody assassinations, and the birth and growing-up years of their three children. This book opens five years after the end of the first half, and primarily follows the two princes and their young commanders, now in their late twenties and early thirties, as the balance of power shifts from the aging parents to their children.
I enjoyed reading this series a great deal - Sherwood is at her best when she weaves together plots from the threads of many lives, and she certainly does that here. Though the cast is the typical large one with everyone sharing the same half-dozen names, her nicknames and excellent characterization meant that I never got too lost among the characters. I was particularly fond of Lineas, Quill, Braids Senelaec, and Fish Pereth among the supporting cast, and really enjoyed finding out a little more about favorite characters from the Inda series.
Something Sherwood also does quite well is frank discussions of love, sex, disability, and emotions. There is quite a bit of Deaf and transgender representation in this series that I thought was rather well-done, and sexual attraction and freedom is handled in a very relaxed, modern way that still seems very natural in her universe.
Despite loving the universe, characters, and a lot of the plot in this series, I was astonished and frankly rather upset by the way the story ended. One of the reasons I enjoy Sherwood so much is because she writes realistic characters in an idealistic fantasy world, and like Tolkien her plots always seem to point to higher ideals of truth, justice, and love. This ending felt like the conclusion of a George RR Martin or Joe Abercrombie novel, where everything is shades of dark grey and people will be awful just because they can. Others might enjoy this more, but I don't know that I'll read this again.
**Some spoilers below***
One of the primary characters is depicted as conflicted and proud, but good-hearted and trying to do their best, throughout the story. They make mistakes several times, and are shown to have less than perfect motivations, but work hard to overcome this. This characterization stays largely the same right up until about the last 200 pages of the story, when this character takes an abrupt left turn into being completely amoral and disturbingly evil. Several smaller plot threads I found very interesting were dropped entirely at this point, as the book then focuses sharply on the consequences of this character's actions. Once the consequences occur, the story is wrapped up in about two pages of summary "over the next thirty years..." and most of the interesting plot developments are either wiped out or reversed, except for the ones you just never hear any more about.