Years ago, Brophy, the Heir of Autumn , sacrificed himself to save Ohndarien from the insidious Black Emmeria. Ever since, his beloved Shara has spent her life trying to free Brophy from the ensorcelled dreams that keep the ancient terror at bay. But her struggle is all for naught, until the mysterious Arefaine Morgeon returns with the key to releasing the trapped hero. Yet, once woken, Brophy has been twisted into a vicious monster after years of tormented dreams. Heartbroken and betrayed, Shara buries her broken heart in a single-minded quest for pleasure and prestige in the Summer Isles, until she is forced into a deadly clash with a sadistic mage whose power comes from pain and humiliation. In the struggle that follows, both Shara and Brophy will be tested to the limits as they fight to save Ohndarien.
I really hate second books in trilogies that appear to all intents and purposes to have a satisfying conclusion and then when you get there, the novel just leaves you hanging. Lucky I waited to read this book until the third book was out. This second book is continuation of the first book -- many years later and Brophy is still a prisoner of the heartstone holding the evil magic at bay. The Child Goddess has grown up and comes to free Brophy, but she has a secret plan to use magic to re-bring a glorious Kingdom on Eften. Meanwhile, Shara is with the Ships of Summer on the open sea with Lawdon and Malik trying to stop a plot. There are various open plot lines that are left unfinished.
This is a second novel in a trilogy, and has the usual trappings of a second novel: lots of potential plots/storylines being developed, no large conflict (and therefore no big conflict resolution), etc. Also, is it possible for there to be a guy-girl pair that does not involve sex or have sexual relations?
The development is slow, and if you ignore the gratuitous sex, the writing is workmanlike - it gets the job done, but it's nothing special. A good point is that the authors balance the disparate timelines and characters well. It also doesn't dwell in unnecessary worldbuilding - e.g. we know there are ten paths of magic, but only two are explored.
Not having read the third book, my sense so far is that there are good ideas here, just not well executed. This has the potential to have been an epic series - it just hasn't been pulled off.
What a turn of events! The harrowed prince turned mad and a country dependent on madness. I think this is the book that had me thirsting for the next in the series. The plot thickens and a hero is challenged. Both characters are amazing but I am very enticed by the lead heroin as she adapts to make things work for her own needs while placed in horrible circumstances.
Tarot Card Eight of Swords Feeling trapped in a relationship or situation that is abusive or becoming abusive.
I enjoyed this fantasy trilogy immensely. If you enjoy fantasy novels then there is no reason you will not enjoy Book 1 (Heir of Autumn), Book 2 (Mistress of Winter), and Book 3 (Queen of Oblivion).
I loved it! I kept putting off reading this book too. I passed it by several times thinking it didn't look that interesting, it was too long, etc. I'm glad I finally picked it up. Well worth the read. I've just ordered the conclusion to this trilogy and can't wait to get it!