Charis’ life seems to have completely fallen apart, but as the new queen of Calera, she refuses to fall apart herself. Her kingdom may be in the clutches of the Rakuuna merpeople impossible to kill, her parents may be dead, her allies may be unfaithful, and the man she loved may have been a lying traitor, but she will be the immovable queen her mother raised her to be. At least in front of others. She needs to shore up some allies, find refuge for her people who managed to escape the invasion with her, and find a way to defeat the Rakuuna. Likely she won’t survive, but she’ll do her best to make sure her cousins and heirs Nalani and Holland do survive along with the rest of her subjects. But holding it together is tearing her apart, and just when she thinks she’s starting to get an upper hand, she’s forced to face Tal and outmaneuver her enemies from within their clutches.
I put off reading this because I was afraid it was going to get bad for Charis, and wasn’t sure I could handle it. I was also afraid it was going to turn her into someone I couldn’t root for, but then I realized who was writing this story. Redwine was going to weave in hope, and she was going to save Charis from herself somehow. And once I dove in (and stopped listening to the audiobook version whose voice interpretations of the characters grated on me) I could not put the book down (I devoured ch 5-the end in less than 24 hrs) and found that what I trusted Redwine to do proved to be true. This is a whip smart fantasy thriller about a very clever young woman learning it is ok to not be ok, ok to rely on others, ok to trust others to take care of themselves and not feel like it is up to you to protect everyone, and also to use the skills that you know you are well trained in and excel at, to lean into your strengths (which in Charis’ case is out-smarting and out-thinking all the opponents). I like how the book resolves Tal and Charis’ relationship, and how we get there. It turns out to be a very sweet and wholesome love story. I adore Nalani and Holland and how they help protect Charis from herself (Tal does this too, and her guard Reuben a bit too). And I loved trying to guess what Charis is going to pull out of her sleeve next and then being surprised when what she figures out exceeds my expectations. It’s like a heist story, but the people pulling the heist are the good guys and restore justice and sow hope and stand for what is good and loving (and even offer grace to some) instead of some rival thief gang outmaneuvering another rival gang for revenge. It’s absolutely amazing, and I highly recommend it.
Notes on content:
Language: None
Sexual content: Nothing beyond a kiss.
Violence: There are some battles and attacks. The Rakuuna are pretty merciless and dig claws and fangs into people when they attack and bash them around. There are some sobering killings with them involved. The weapon Charis finds against the Rakuuna is a poison they have to test to see how it works, it ends up tearing the creatures up from the inside out and is a bit gross. There are some poisonings and stabbings.
Ethnic diversity: Fake ethnicities. I don’t really remember skin color described except the Rakuuna, it seems left up to you to imagine.
LGBTQ+ content: None specified
Other: Charis puts herself under an immense amount of pressure and is being used as a pawn in others’ games too. Her stress level is insane and she is having trouble eating and sleeping, thankfully her friends look out for her and force her to take care of herself before it gets super bad.