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Heirs of Bone and Sea

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Dive into the grand adventure of two young royals seeking to end the war between their two kingdoms in what Kirkus calls, "A Sapphic fantasy romance series-opener brimming with blood and longing."
Climb the tower. Kill the princess.

Evhen, princess—no, queen—of Vodaeard, is on a revenge mission. After witnessing her parents' brutal murder by the king of Marama and the horror of his undead army, she's vowed to kill his daughter. It'll be poetic justice and also take away his supernatural edge in the war. But when she realizes the princess might be an ignorant pawn, she changes course and hides her royal identity—after all, she can't trust an enemy, no matter how beautiful she is.

Stay alive. Break the curse.

Princess Kalei of Marama is moon-blessed, allowing her to resurrect her kingdom's loyal subjects. But when she's attacked in her safe lighthouse by a fiery pirate, her worldview is shattered once she learns what her power is really being used for. Determined to prove her innocence and willingness to stop her father, she has no choice but to trust her would-be killer to safely deliver her to the Vodaeardean princess. But who can she trust in when it seems Captain Evhen is not the only one who wants her dead?
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    • Kirkus

      In Adams' YA fantasy novel, a teenage queen and a princess on opposite sides of a war collide in a fatal quest for revenge. Princess Kalei Maristela of the island nation Marama has the power that will win the war her parents are hiding from her. Kalei is known as the "Princess of Death"; during the full moon, she has the ability to bring the dead back to life. Additionally, she can use her long, moon-white hair as an extra limb, among other powers she discovers on her eventual journey. Queen Evhen Lockes of Vodaeard, the other point-of-view character, became queen when immediately before the start of the novel's action, Chief Mikala, Kalei's father, murdered her parents, Vodaeard's sitting king and queen. Evhen and her brother, Alekey, sail to Marama for revenge, along with the king's advisor, Talen, and Evhen's trainer, Icana. When Evhen appears to exact her revenge on Mikala by murdering Kalei, the princess convinces her to instead kidnap her to use as collateral, allowing her to discover the truth behind her parents' schemes. Evhen, Kalei, Talen, Icana, and Alekey travel across the continent, racing back to Vodaeard in hopes of stopping the war. Along the way, romance blossoms between the leads, despite the mistrust they share. The point of view alternates each chapter between Kalei and Evhen. Oddly, the alternating points of view continue until the final chapter, which is a flashback from Alekey's point of view. Despite this abrupt transition, and some editorial issues, the narrative is fully engrossing. Throughout the novel, the sensual descriptors lend realism to the fantasy plot ("Moon dust sparkled in the marble beneath my bare feet. Gold veins ran in rivulets through the floor, streaming up the walls to the vaulted ceiling, spilling into the hundred-candle chandelier dangling from a glass dome"). The gore is heavy throughout, especially when Kalei raises the dead--Kalei's resurrections are not healing, leaving the resurrected with the wounds that caused their deaths, adding a level of body horror to this fantasy. A Sapphic fantasy romance series-opener brimming with blood and longing.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)

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  • English

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