EPITAPH PROVEN

FOEDUS ET MONSTRUM

A full-bodied cast and enjoyably dense plot elevate this fantasy tale.

In Nullius’ fantasy debut, a woman reclaims her memories spanning a millennium of warring humans, sorcerers, and immortals.

In Golem, an isolated colony “booming with technology,” Lyaphend Farwalth meets up with the Prime Dictator’s daughter, Wave Haizer. She happens to possess an object Lyaphend wants—one that, with a mere touch, will open up Lyaphend’s mind to a past she’s forgotten. Evidently, more than a thousand years ago she was Enlenea, one of the “tainted” humans turned immortal by a mysterious energy. She belonged to the Elegies, a select few of the tainted that some humans worshiped as gods. While the tainted can be killed, they’re eventually “revived” in objects or living people; Lyaphend won’t truly know who or what she is until all of her memories have returned. As the story progresses and time passes, readers encounter a varied cast, including the red-eyed, sorcery-practicing Halians and other individuals often at odds with one another. The novel feels like a series of subplots; along with the story of the Elegies, there are narrative threads following the Reverentia group, determined to find the origin of the tainted’s power, and Argen, a young man from a “land far away” who travels to Golem. It makes for an unpredictable tale, as characters will suddenly resurface in later stories despite numerous years having passed. A standout among the vibrant cast is Regnal, an Elegy with no form of his own who “imitates things of his interest,” such as an avian creature. The prose shines, as when an Elegy utters, “Your flavoured animosity bitters my resolve,” or when Argen wipes “the cold sweat from his brow, cleansing his memories of a dream’s unrelenting musk.” All of this culminates in a smashing ending—one that the author can let linger or pick up at another time for a sequel.

A full-bodied cast and enjoyably dense plot elevate this fantasy tale. (glossary)

Pub Date: Dec. 30, 2023

ISBN: 9798218271510

Page Count: 281

Publisher: Self

Review Posted Online: Nov. 15, 2023

THE HURRICANE WARS

Slow and plodding.

A young woman with a magical ability to harness light discovers she is royalty.

Talasyn is a foot soldier for her homeland of Sardovia, which has been under attack for the past decade by the powerful and evil Night Empire, a conflict known as the Hurricane Wars. Talasyn is an orphan with no knowledge of her family, but she assumes they might be the source of her rare, magical Lightweaving talent. During a battle with the forces of the Night Empire, Talasyn spars with Prince Alaric, a fierce warrior who is the son and heir to the Night Emperor. Talasyn is sent on a covert mission into Nenavar, a nearby matriarchy that has remained neutral during the Hurricane Wars, to try to access a Light Sever which could hone and refine her magic. Instead, she discovers she is the heir to their royal throne; she and her mother, now presumed dead, disappeared under mysterious circumstances when she was a year old. Alaric follows her into Nenavar, and they discover his magical ability to cast darkness and shadows produces shocking results when mixed with her Lightweaving. A few weeks later, the Night Empire defeats Sardovia and ends the Hurricane Wars, and the novel transitions to a tedious, slow-moving story of court intrigue and diplomacy. A group of Sardovian soldiers and refugees seek asylum in Nenavar, but Talasyn’s grandmother agrees to protect them only if Talasyn agrees to join the royal court and marry Alaric. The politics surrounding the impending wedding is the primary plot for the rest of the novel, and it’s a slog. The glacially slow pacing only serves to highlight the confusing world building and underdeveloped characters. It’s unclear why Alaric and Talasyn are attracted to each other, and their tentative romance is just as stuck in a rut as the plot.

Slow and plodding.

Pub Date: Oct. 3, 2023

ISBN: 9780063277274

Page Count: 480

Publisher: Harper Voyager

Review Posted Online: July 26, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2023

THRONE OF THE FALLEN

Maniscalco fans will enjoy, but it will be hard for new readers to find their footing.

An artist with a secret and a Lord of Hell must work together to solve a puzzle in this romantic fantasy adventure.

Miss Camilla Antonius has a lot on her plate. She’s a talented artist, but is barely keeping her late father’s gallery afloat while being blackmailed by a local lord who knows a potentially ruinous secret about her. Envy, one of the seven princes of hell, is also trying to keep up appearances while a terrible malady slowly decimates his court. When he’s invited to play a dangerous magical game with a prize that could save his people, he goes all in. When one of his clues involves Camilla, the two must work together, becoming partners as they cross realms, dealing with human, demons, and Fae in order for both to win what they most covet—all while doing their best not to fall in love. Though this is a standalone novel, it’s set in the same universe as Maniscalco’s Kingdom of the Wicked trilogy, and certain elements, character dynamics, and plot points will be harder to follow for readers unfamiliar with the earlier books. This is also Maniscalco’s adult debut, and it shows: Steamy scene follows steamy scene as characters use extremely coarse language, like a teenager at last gleefully free of parental supervision. The story itself, an adventure filled with riddles to be solved and problems to be overcome, is fun and interesting but overshadowed by the need to push every boundary. Despite its length, the book reads quickly, switching back and forth between the two leads’ points of view, though the voices aren’t distinct enough to be clear. It’s all quite jumbled.

Maniscalco fans will enjoy, but it will be hard for new readers to find their footing.

Pub Date: Oct. 3, 2023

ISBN: 9780316557290

Page Count: 384

Publisher: Little, Brown

Review Posted Online: Aug. 12, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2023

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