Book Review:: Anji Kills A King | Evan Leikam

I have followed Evan’s IG profile @BookReviewsKill for a long time, appreciating his considered thoughts on not just modern popular books, but the full breadth of sci-fi and fantasy literature. His massive collection of tattered paperbacks and well-worn trade editions from the background of his older videos evoked an instant feeling of comradery with a fellow book lover. I was thrilled when he announced he had a book deal with Tor and would be coming out with his very own fantasy series, and so pleased when I saw a copy of the audiobook in my inbox for early review.

Long story short, I’m impressed.

Anji Kills A King by Evan Leikam Book Cover

The premise is self-described in the title. Anji, a servant in the king’s castle, kills him in the prologue. It becomes clear shortly after that she was not quite anticipating the wider implications of his death either for herself, or the greater realm. What follows is a reluctant journey she can’t escape.

I really loved Moira Quirk’s narration of this novel. Anji has a strong voice and it felt all the more powerful with the right narrator to do her justice.

The novel is relatively fast paced. I found it got a little meandering around the two thirds mark where I was craving something new, but I can’t disparage it much on pacing, as it gets going right away and the integrity of the writing itself maintains itself all the way through. The world building is far from overwhelming, giving only bits and spurts in a way that kept it interesting and intriguing.

Overall, this is a very strong debut, and after that ending, I am so interested to find out what happens next for Anji. Way to go Evan, this really lived up to the hype I was expecting.

Note:: I received an early copy of this book from the publisher through netgalley in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.

Details

Title:: Anji Kills A King
Author:: Evan Leikam
Genre:: Fantasy
Publisher:: Tor
Length:: 368 pages
Audio Length:: 10h 36m
Audiobook Narrator:: Moira Quirk
Published:: May 13th, 2025
The Litertarian Rating:: 4-Stars



If you liked this book, check out…

The City in Glass | Nghi Vo
Divine Rivals | Rebecca Ross
Our Infinite Fates | Laura Steven

Book Review:: The Seven O’Clock Club | Amelia Ireland

What does it take to earn a five-star rating? Is it simply capturing and holding your attention? Is it making you feel things down deep in the depths of your soul? Is it creating a world/character/story that will linger in your mind for years to come? If your answer is yes to any of the above, The Seven O’Clock Club makes the list without even trying.

The Seven O'Clock Club by Amelia Ireland Book Cover

This is a book about grief – possibly the most complex of human emotions. Four people are selected to be a part of an experimental project, led by a woman named Geniveve. Each of them has a pain so deep and vivid they can’t face it, it’s ruining what is left of their lives. Geniveve brings them together once a week at seven o’clock for a gently led support-group style meeting. Slowly they are asked to introduce themselves: who they are, how they’ve changed, and eventually, what it was that happened to bring them to the group.

Each of them has a story, each of them a pain so great it fundamentally changed them. And together, they find community. Friendship. Family.

I knew early on this book was going to be a profound experience. The characters opening themselves up and pouring out their pain was so powerful. Chills were had. Tears were shed. My own heart broke a little bit for every one of them.

These characters and their situations were so well-realized, and when the twist came I was skeptical at first, but it allowed for the themes to resound even more powerfully and left me with a lot to ponder once the story ended.

I am so grateful I got the opportunity to read this book early through netgalley after being one of the chosen ones by Berkley for this title. This is one of the best books I’ve read so far this year. I can’t wait to see what’s next for Amelia Ireland!

Note:: I received an early copy of this book from the publisher through netgalley in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.

Details

Title:: The Seven O’Clock Club
Author:: Amelia Ireland
Genre:: General Fiction/Fantasy
Publisher:: Berkley
Length:: 368 pages
Audio Length:: 12h
Audiobook Publisher:: Penguin Audio
Published:: April 15th, 2025
The Litertarian Rating:: 5-Stars

Linky Links!!

If you liked this book, check out…

The Last Love Note | Emma Grey
Maybe Next Time | Cesca Major
Yin Yang Love Song | Lauren Kung Jessen

Book Review:: Our Infinite Fates | Laura Steven

What is the meaning of life when you know it is so fleeting? Is it worth it to love when you know it will always end? What would you do, to save yourself? To live?

They’ve loved each other in a thousand lifetimes. They’ve killed each other in every one.

Our Infinite Fates by Laura Steven Book Review

Evelyn (Eve-lynn) has never lived past the age of eighteen, though she’s lived hundreds of lifetimes. Always on or before her birthday, her ethereal rival, Arden, finds her and kills her, ending both of their current lifetimes. Moments later, they reincarnate in other bodies, in another part of the world. It happens again and again and it hurts every time. With only fuzzy memories of her many pasts, Evelyn wants, finally, to understand why Arden is so determined to kill her in every lifetime so she can finally put an end to it and just once, grow up.

Arden has gotten very good at disguising themselves, so Evelyn studies every face, every glance, every person near her age she can in hopes to find them before it’s too late. And this time? She’s determined to beg at least a few more days. Her beloved sister is dying – she needs a bone marrow transplant from Evelyn, who is her only match. She may have lived a thousand lifetimes, but she’s loved her family in every one, and she won’t let her die. She’s the only one who can save her.

This story is layered in complexity and meaning and has such a compelling premise. A tagline this good makes you want to find out more, and its design keeps you turning pages. We get to experience the few memories Evelyn has of her past lives, the pieces she’s sorting through to find clues as to Arden’s motivations to kill her, no matter what. Even in lifetimes they’ve been desperately in love, Arden will not let her live past their birthday. The contrast between the intrinsic love and the violence of murder is fascinating. As far as they know, Evelyn and Arden are the only ones in such a situation, reincarnating and remembering their past lives. It is just the two of them, in all their infinite fates.

Our Infinite Fates has been compared to The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue by VE Schwab, one of my favorites, and I would agree. Both novels have the mercurial factor of an outside, unknown force just beyond their understanding pulling invisible strings. They’re both written by very skilled authors. I can only imagine how difficult it must be to weave a tale this intricate and vast. And both have endings that are just *chef’s kiss*

Absolutely five stars from me. Though I was gifted the audiobook (the narrator was amazing), I’ve preordered the hardcover as well because I’ll be reading this again, no question!

Note:: I received an early copy of this book from the publisher through netgalley in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.

Details

Title:: Our Infinite Fates
Author:: Laura Steven
Genre:: Fantasy
Publisher:: Wednesday Books
Length:: 352 pages
Audio Length:: 11h 12m
Audiobook Narrator:: Sofia Oxenham
Audiobook Publisher:: Macmillan Audio
Published:: March 4th, 2025
The Litertarian Rating:: 5-Stars



If you liked this book, check out…

The City in Glass | Nghi Vo
The Familiar | Leigh Bardugo
Divine Rivals | Rebecca Ross
The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue | VE Schwab

Reading Diary:: A Discovery of Witches | Deborah Harkness

My experience with A Discovery of Witches by Deborah Harkness has been different to every other book I’ve read this year, or ever. For this reason, it doesn’t feel right to simply ‘review’ this book. Instead, I’m going to walk through my journey with it (so far). I have a feeling you other readers out there will be able to relate to something, at least, in this experience. We’re lovers of books and story, after all. But for those of you interested, yes, I gave this book five stars, no question.

It begins with…

Let’s start at the very beginning. I heard of this book when it was first popular. I even checked it out from the library, and after an incredibly long wait, I had couldn’t remember why I’d wanted to read it in the first place (I mean vampires? Really? Weren’t we passed that, as a culture?). Plus, as usual, I had a long list of other books on my list that I prioritized instead. After that, I had no intention of reading it. Ever.

and then…

Then the TV series came to Netflix in the US, and during Halloween season, too! My husband and I were looking for something new to watch, and that’s what we chose one night.

Holy crap.

Instantly I knew it was something I had to read. Not only did the story intrigue me, this ages old mystery and people who have been around through ancient history (this is what I’m always missing from other vampire tales. Oh you’re a hundred years old? Who cares. Two hundred? Snore. ONE THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED?! Now we’re talking…), and a girl with magic who refuses to embrace it, but I was so curious about the construction of the story itself. There are so many storylines depicted in the show, I wanted to see how it was translated from the book. Yeah, I’m a book nerd and a story geek and an aspiring writer who is desperate to soak up every quirk and detail I encounter.

I had to read it. So I ordered the paperback trilogy boxed set.

We finished the first season in a few days, and we started the first few episodes of season two before I decided to stop and catch up with the books before continuing.

It begins (again)…

A Discovery of Witches by Deborah Harkness Book Cover

I tackled this thing armed with all of my tools of the trade. My copy of this book is underlined, highlighted, and page flagged to within an inch of its life. Because I already knew the plot of the story from the show, I was able to identify the details and ‘clues’ throughout the narrative that had to do with the primary conflict in one color, I used another color highlight for the romance details I liked, and a third for the magic/creatures details. I flagged every scene or micro-scene that felt important or extra meaningful.

In short, I savored it. Every word, every detail, every choice by the author.

There are some odd things about this story, from a structure point of view. It doesn’t follow a lot of the formulaic advice you heard incessantly in writing circles. It takes its time. It makes itself easy to savor. I loved it.

The story is built in layers, and though there are probably too many scenes with Matthew and Diana just sitting around talking about intense magical theory, all that information is needed by the reader and can be forgiven. It’s hard to tell if I’d have been so engaged with these sometimes-tedious conversations if I didn’t already have some understanding of where it all was leading already. I suspect it wouldn’t have been quite as enjoyable if I was reading it with no context, but it could easily be the opposite. That’s the thing about books vs adaptations. The only other time I’ve seen an adaptation before reading the books is with The Lord of the Rings, and Pride & Prejudice, and neither of those were as enjoyable to read after seeing them come to life so beautifully on screen (feel free to come at me in the comments). But if I watch something after reading the book, I usually enjoy it a great deal less.

As I said, I stopped watching the show after season two, episode two or three, so I’m actually changing my tactic going forward. I’m currently reading Shadow of Night (book two), and I’m about halfway through. I’m enjoying it just as much as A Discovery of Witches, but I’m feeling the lack of knowledge of what is coming next doubly, since I had that for book one. Such a strange experience!

So tell me — have you read this All Souls series? Have you seen the show? Have I intrigued you enough to pick it up?! Tell me all!

See ya next time!

Details

Title:: A Discovery of Witches (All Souls #1)
Author:: Deborah Harkness
Genre:: Paranormal Romance
Publisher:: Viking Penguin
Length:: 592 pages
Audio Length:: 23h 59m
Audiobook Narrator:: Jennifer Ikeda
Audiobook Publisher:: Penguin Audio
Published:: February 2011
The Litertarian Rating:: 5-Stars
Spice Rating:: 1

Linky Links!!

Goodreads
Author Website
Amazon Affiliate Links
[Hardcover] [Paperback] [eBook] [Audible]

[trilogy boxed set]

If you liked this book, check out…

The Familiar | Leigh Bardugo
Burn for Me | Ilona Andrews

Book Review:: Toto | A.J. Hackwith

You think you know what the yellow brick road will bring. You have no idea. When you live life through the eyes of a bad dog, it’s a whole new world.

Toto by A.J. Hackwith Book Cover

The Wizard of Oz is an American classic. Toto is a hilarious take on what is objectively a bat-shit crazy tale. I guess this takes my original assumption that the events in Oz were just a dream Dorothy has and tosses it out the window, but hey, at least it’s done well.

This book is funny. I know I already said that, but it’s really funny. Toto is sarcastic and spunky and vein and thinks of Dorothy as the one he’s training to be a good human and not the other way around. Toto’s internal dialogue is *chef’s kiss*.

I found it to be a much wider tale than the film. There is far more depth to it, and the scope is wider. There are wars, and rebellions, and pestilence. There are also some interesting character quirks that might give you an idea of the kind of shenanigans you might encounter in this tale. The wicked witch of the west, for example, is an avid crocheter.

I found it to be a nice escape, but I didn’t find it very emotionally interesting. I didn’t care overmuch about anything happening, and it took me awhile to get through. That being said, it is an excellent book. I laughed a great deal and was so impressed by the cleverness throughout. Well done, Hackwith!

Note: I received this from the publisher & netgalley in exchange for review.

Details

Title:: Toto
Author:: A.J. Hackwith
Genre:: Humor, Fantasy, Retelling
Publisher:: Berkley/Ace
Length:: 352 pages
Audio Length:: 10h 45m
Audiobook Narrator:: Andrew Santana
Audiobook Publisher:: Penguin Audio
Published:: November 12th, 2024
The Litertarian Rating:: 4-Stars

Linky Links!!

Goodreads
Author Website
Amazon Affiliate Links
[Paperback] [eBook] [Audible]

If you liked this book, check out…

Libby Lost and Found | Stephanie Booth
The Borrowed Life of Frederick Fife | Anna Johnston

The Season of Sci-Fi/Fantasy

I have been hustling, y’all. Launching this blog has been important to me, and though it’s still unknown, I wanted to get plenty of content up to make it a worthwhile place to stick around a minute and explore. With 70+ reviews up now, I feel like I can say it is. Now, I’ve made plenty of commitments already for books that I need to read coming up over the next year, but I’ve also had an idea brewing at the back of my mind for a while.

Sci-Fi/Fantasy Books I want to read. The Green Bone Saga, The Dandelion Dynasty, the Red Rising Saga, the next installments of The Stormlight Archives & The Empyrean series, and more!
The physical books I want to read.
There are more on audio & ebook too ๐Ÿ™ˆ

I have a big fat stack of sci-fi and fantasy novels I reeeeally want to read. They’re not the kind of books you can read in a weekend (probably), but more importantly, they’re books I don’t want to just blow through. I want to take my time, annotate, immerse myself, and really experience them.

So I’m going to. This will be my season of sci-fi/fantasy! I’ve already started. Right now, I’m (slowly) making my way through A Discovery of Witches by Deborah Harkness, which I had no idea I’d want to read until watching the television adaptation (I thought to myself, wow, this would make a great book, and what do you know?!). I also want to read The Green Bone Saga, The Dandelion Dynasty, the Red Rising Saga, the next installments of The Stormlight Archives & The Empyrean series’ (both of which have new books coming out this winter), along with a dozen more I’d love to get to in the next 100 days or so.

Tis the season, am I right? And it’ll help me chip away at my TBR Challenge, too!

I’m starting a fable book club too, as I work through my list. Feel free to join in if any of these are on your near-term list too!

Is there a better time to dive into big sweeping stories taking place in entirely fictional worlds? Not for me!

Tell me!

  • What are your favorite sci-fi/fantasy reads of all time?
  • Am I missing anything vital on my list?
  • What are you planning to read while the nights are long, and daylight precious?

Happy Reading, friends!

Book Review:: Heartless Hunter | Kristen Ciccarelli

The world is a dangerous place when you have to hide who you are from everyone. Especially when you throw yourself into danger in order to save others.

Heartless Hunter Kristen Ciccarelli Book Cover

Rune is a witch in a land that burns them. The kingdom once run by three witch sister queens has been taken over by a rebellion, and they’re hunting down every last witch to purge them. Rune, keeping her own powers carefully hidden behind a fashionista facade, is helping other witches escape the realm. To do the job better, she courts powerful men at court for information. When the witch she’s been looking for for years is captured, she takes the biggest risk yet and pursues the most dangerous man in the realm – her best friend’s brother, one of the most ruthless Blood Guard members. But there are other magical elements at play, and both Rune and Gideon have everything to lose.

If you’re looking for your next romantasy read, look no further. This one has every juicy element you’ll love. High stakes, heroes, (low spice) romance, twists, risks, secrets, and lore. There’s a reason it’s so popular!

The whole thing is structured so well from the beginning – Gideon and Rune both have reasons that make the courtship, though highly unlikely, inevitable. Neither one of them are stupid or insufferable, but they come at life with strong biases that compel their actions in ways that make perfect sense for their character while continuing to complicate the story.

The least likely element of the story, to me, were everyone’s ages, lol. I mean, every character is so young! New Adult, for sure.

I am dying to read the next book, which comes out in February. If you’re impatient, you might want to add this to your 2025 TBR ๐Ÿ˜‰

Details

Title:: Heartless Hunter (The Crimson Moth #1)
Author:: Kristen Ciccarelli
Genre:: Fantasy
Publisher:: Wednesday Books
Length:: 416 pages
Audio Length:: 12h 8m
Audiobook Narrator:: Grace Gray
Audiobook Publisher:: Listening Library
Published:: February 20, 2024
The Litertarian Rating:: 5-Stars

Linky Links!!

Goodreads
Author Website
Amazon Affiliate Links
[Hardcover] [eBook] [Audible]

If you liked this book, check out…

Divine Rivals | Rebecca Ross
Burn for Me | Ilona Andrews

Book Review:: What the River Knows | Isabel Ibanez

When a book lists The Mummy as a comp in the blurb, you know your girl’s gonna pick it up. That’s as far as I got in the description (I love going in blind), and it was everything I’d hoped and more. There is something so intriguing about ancient Egypt, and when you add a touch of actual magic, you get What the River Knows.

What the River Knows Isabel Ibanez Book Cover

Young Argentinian Inez Olivera’s parents spend half of every year in Egypt, working alongside and funding archeological digs there. They’ve never let Inez make the treacherous journey so far across the globe with them, but when Inez receives a letter that the two of them have been lost in the sands of the desert, she sneaks away from her family in Buenos Aires and steals away to Egypt to meet her uncle, who worked with them there. Inez is determined to find out the truth of what happened to her parents, their lives in Egypt, and whatever she can about the magic ring her father secretly sent to her before he died. Between her tight-lipped uncle who tries to push her onto an Argentina-bound boat every chance he gets, and his handsome rogue ‘aide’ he sets to mind her the rest of the time, Inez has to scheme to find out the secrets her parents kept from her, and the rest of the world. Meanwhile, her uncle is in a race to discover the tomb of Cleopatra before his biggest rival, and the ring Inez’ father sent her might just be the key he needs to do it.

This book is a grand adventure with stakes that reliably rise ever higher the whole time, down to the last line (which had my jaw on the floor). It reads like nineteenth century historical fiction, if there were magic rings, and magic sandals, and magic neckties back then. I absolutely loved the tangled webs of secrets and lies that build and build and leave you wondering if what you think you know is the truth, or just another deception. It was seriously compelling, but the pacing was maybe slower than some readers might prefer. Inez takes time to describe the things around her, which adds to the complexity of the world and gives the novel a rich, complete flavor.

The best part, perhaps, is our heroine. Inez is a spunky, resourceful woman in a time when those of her gender had very little power, if any at all. A book like this doesn’t work well with weak or arrogant main characters, and luckily, Ibanez gives us a smart, cunning woman we can trust to act rationally with the information she has. With so many trying to hide their truths from her, anything less would have been torturous to endure.

Did I mention the will-they-won’t-they slow burn forbidden romance plotline? Inez and Whittford Hayes, her uncle’s ‘aide’, are undeniably attracted to one another, but life isn’t that easy, and when she doesn’t know who she can trust, the tension is utterly delicious. Every little moment that betrayed their feelings I ate up with relish, including probably the shortest chapter I’ve ever seen:

Bloody hell.

Whit

I consumed this story as an audiobook narrated by Ana Osorio & Ahmed Hamad. Ana, especially, impressed me. There are several accents to juggle, and in general she handled it gracefully. It was a real pleasure to listen to.

The worst part? Having to wait until November for the sequel. The ending has you begging for what happens next. Masterful storytelling, honestly — and I cannot wait for more! So if you’re looking for a little more mystery and adventure in your life, What the River Knows will certainly scratch that itch.

Details

Title:: What the River Knows (Secrets of the Nile, #1)
Author:: Isabel Ibanez
Genre:: Historical Fantasy
Publisher:: Wednesday Books
Length:: 404 pages
Audio Length:: 16h 36m
Audiobook Narrator:: Ahmed Hamad & Ana Osorio
Audiobook Publisher:: Macmillan Audio
Published:: October 31st, 2023
The Litertarian Rating:: 5-Stars

Linky Links!!

Goodreads
Author Website
Amazon Affiliate Links
[Hardcover] [Paperback] [eBook] [Audible]

If you liked this book, check out…

Divine Rivals | Rebecca Ross
Ruthless Vows | Rebecca Ross

Book Review:: The City in Glass | Nghi Vo

Where have I been all my life where I haven’t experienced the work of Hugo Award winning author Nghi Vo? By happy circumstance, I’ve been given the opportunity to review her latest book before its release, The City in Glass. Now I will take it upon my own responsibility to make sure you don’t miss out on this unique and riveting story.

The City in Glass Nghi Vo Book Cover
Romanesque statues of a man and woman on either side of a burning city in the background.

This is a book unlike anything I have read. It is poetry and philosophy. Biology and sociology. It is Anthropology and metaphysics. It captures at once the fragility of a human life, and its unique, irreplaceable beauty. Perhaps most of all it explores the most potent and universal human desire: to be remembered.

Azril is an ancient city that has grown and developed through the ages. It has done so by the careful and loving influence of the demon Vitrine, who records its most special figureheads, events, and traditions in the book she stores in the glass case within herself. When a group of vengeful angels comes to destroy what she most loves, she is almost destroyed in her grief and curses the angel nearest her before giving in to her despair. Unwilling to give up the place she loves, she sifts through the wreckage slowly and methodically and coaxes the rivers to return to the once prosperous land. The angel she cursed is ostracized from his own kind so long as he bears the mark she’s given him, and she refuses to remove it, so he keeps close and watches as Vitrine scrambles to recreate that which was once so precious to her. Decades pass. Then centuries. More.

Gazing upon the Earth from the astral perspective offers such value to consider. When we realize as humans how fleeting we are, does it not humble us? Does it not force us into gratitude for the present moment, every moment, we happen to be granted?

I received a copy to listen to for free, and before I was halfway done with it, I had pre-ordered a hardcover copy. This is the kind of book that begs to be read with regularity. I have no doubt in my mind that revisiting these pages will reveal new and fascinating insights each and every time I turn them.

Details

Title:: The City in Glass
Author:: Nghi Vo
Genre:: Fantasy
Publisher:: Tordotcom
Length:: 224 pages
Audio Length:: 6h 5m
Audiobook Narrator:: Susan Dalian
Audiobook Publisher:: Macmillan Audio
Published:: October 1st, 2024
The Litertarian Rating:: 5-Stars

Linky Links!!

Goodreads
Author Website
Amazon Affiliate Links
[Hardcover] [eBook] [Audible]

If you liked this book, check out…

Divine Rivals | Rebecca Ross
The Familiar | Leigh Bardugo
Heartless Hunter | Kristen Ciccarelli

Book Review:: Ruthless Vows | Rebecca Ross

Letters of Enchantment Book #2 (conclusion)

[Book One is Divine Rivals – skip this review if you haven’t read it yet! There will be rampant book one spoilers!]

The last pages of Divine Rivals left me SO nervous. I was terrified it was going to be similar to a Hunger-Games-Peeta situation, but it was clear pretty early that was not going to be the case. Maybe that’s a spoiler, but it held me back from picking this book up for a few weeks, because my heart couldn’t take that! So for anyone else in the same boat, know it’s okay. This book isn’t going to run your heart through a shredder in that same agonizing, irreparable way.

Ruthless Vows Rebecca Ross Book Cover

The war between gods continues with fervor. Dacre moves relentlessly toward the city of Oath and his estranged god-wife Enva. Corruption in the city has left it unprepared for the invasion Dacre is planning. Iris is back in town, working at the newspaper with Attie and they’re striving, as ever, for the truth. Meanwhile, Roman wakes up among Dacre’s ranks with no memory of who he is, or how he came to be there. He is tasked with writing articles for Dacre, from his side of the war, in direct opposition of Iris and friends. But he’s still using the Aluette typewriter, and Iris is determined to save him.

This is a book about war. War is violent and messy and maims or destroys everything it touches. Rebecca Ross did a great job keeping that front of mind. There was no character unscathed by their experiences in this story, but in the end, there was hope. There was always hope, and that’s the key to a story with so much darkness.

If you loved the romance of Divine Rivals, rejoice! This book is still very romantic. Iris and Roman’s romance is plagued by distance and danger, but there are other sparks kindling, too. I loved the subtlety of Attie’s love story told in lingering looks, concern, and quiet conversation. I loved that Forest was able to find someone to share himself with, too. Within the darkness, there is always light.

The focus, of course, is not the romance, but the whole saving-the-world-as-we-know-it thing. Rest assured, there is plenty of action in the relentlessly paced plot. So much is at stake, and success isn’t guaranteed. The tension is strung tight, but there are little moments of respite sprinkled in too that offer great balance.

This book had to accomplish so much. It is the conclusion of the series, and from where Divine Rivals ended, there was a lot of ground left to cover. This book was far more heavy on the magic and fantasy, but since book one eased us in, I still think it’s a great entry-level fantasy book those unused to the subject could easily devour.

There is nothing in this duology I would change. It’s wonderful. No notes! If it were up to me, it would be required reading! I know I will personally be rereading these beautiful books many many times, and the hardcovers look gorgeous on their well-earned place on my bookshelf.

Details

Title:: Ruthless Vows (Letters of Enchantment #2)
Author:: Rebecca Ross
Genre:: Historical Fantasy
Publisher:: Wednesday Books
Length:: 432 pages
Audio Length:: 14h 6m
Audiobook Narrator:: Alex Wingfield & Rebecca Norfolk
Audiobook Publisher:: Macmillan Audio
Published:: December 26th, 2023
The Litertarian Rating:: 5-Stars

Linky Links!!

Goodreads
Author Website
Amazon Affiliate Links
[Hardcover] [Paperback] [eBook] [Audible]

If you liked this book, check out…

In the Likely Event | Rebecca Yarros
Divine Rivals | Rebecca Ross