Book Thoughts by Rachelle
I couldn’t read The Fire Queen fast enough to find out how Kalinda’s story continued. Even though it’s been awhile since I read The Hundredth Queen, I was pulled right back into this amazing setting.
King has done an incredible job of building a world with awe-inspiring powers, people, and traditions. There are so many threads to this plot and I can’t wait to see the full tapestry!
Here’s more about the book:
In the second book in The Hundredth Queen Series, Emily R. King once again follows a young warrior queen’s rise to meet her destiny in a richly imagined world of sorcery and forbidden powers.
Though the tyrant rajah she was forced to marry is dead, Kalinda’s troubles are far from over. A warlord has invaded the imperial city, and now she’s in exile. But she isn’t alone. Kalinda has the allegiance of Captain Deven Naik, her guard and beloved, imprisoned for treason and stripped of command. With the empire at war, their best hope is to find Prince Ashwin, the rajah’s son, who has promised Deven’s freedom on one condition: that Kalinda will fight and defeat three formidable opponents.
But as Kalinda’s tournament strengths are once again challenged, so too is her relationship with Deven. While Deven fears her powers, Ashwin reveres them—as well as the courageous woman who wields them. Kalinda comes to regard Ashwin as the only man who can repair a warring world and finds herself torn between her allegiance to Deven and a newly found respect for the young prince.
With both the responsibility to protect her people and the fate of those she loves weighing heavily upon her, Kalinda is forced again to compete. She must test the limits of her fire powers and her hard-won wisdom. But will that be enough to unite the empire without sacrificing all she holds dear?
Other books you may enjoy:
Visit Rachelle’s Book Review Page to see all reviews HERE.
Grab these free tips from a bestselling and award-winning author HERE
Follow Rachelle:
*Affiliate links used in post. All reviews shared are Rachelle’s honest opinion.*