Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Bride of the Shadow King #1

Bride of the Shadow King

Rate this book
For fans of  The Bridge Kingdom  and  A Deal with the Elf King , this sweeping tale of love and betrayal is equal blends sweet and spice. A shunned princess.
A reluctant king.
A marriage that could save both their kingdoms . . .
but destroy their hearts. Though she is the oldest daughter, Princess Faraine lives in the background, shunned from court and kept out of sight. Her chronic illness makes her a liability to the crown, and she has learned to give place to her beautiful, favored younger sister in all things. When the handsome and enigmatic Shadow King comes seeking a bride, Faraine is not surprised that her sister is his choice. Though not eager to take a human bride, King Vor is willing to do what is necessary for the sake of his people. When he meets the lively Princess Ilsevel, he quickly agrees to a marriage arrangement. So why can't he get the haunting eyes of her older sister out of his head?

498 pages, Kindle Edition

First published July 1, 2022

2941 people are currently reading
49263 people want to read

About the author

Sylvia Mercedes

37 books2,256 followers
Hi, there. I'm Sylvia: cat-lover, tea-drinker, book-addict, and avid fan of the Kickbutt Heroine Fantasy Genre! If you like reading about tough heroines with extraordinary powers facing their demons and saving their loved ones . . . then we ought to be friends!

Be sure to subscribe to my newsletter. You get my novel, Song of Shadows, for FREE when you sign up!

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
4,305 (27%)
4 stars
5,763 (36%)
3 stars
4,127 (26%)
2 stars
1,183 (7%)
1 star
362 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,708 reviews
Profile Image for Holly.
1,533 reviews1,609 followers
June 15, 2022
3.5 stars

For those of you looking for your next adult fantasy romance series, with a bit of a slow burn for the first book, then this might just be what you are looking for. I rather enjoyed this - a couple who are initially very attracted to each other, but have several legitimate obstacles in their way. There's also some mystery and secrets and deception both at the personal level and in the overall worldbuilding/plot which makes me want to read the next book when it comes out.

I do have a couple of problems though, mainly with how the book transitions between the two main characters' point of view. I am fine with multiple narrators generally speaking, but it annoys me when one chapter ends and the beginning of the next chapter forces you to rewind in time and read part of the same scene from the previous chapter, only now it's from another character's point of view. I think the timeline should always move forward, I don't like it when the timeline moves back and forth just so you can see the same scene from two points of view. Their thoughts are not interesting enough to have to read part of the same scene twice.
Profile Image for NMmomof4.
1,784 reviews5,037 followers
July 30, 2022
3.5 Stars

Overall Opinion
The Good: I enjoyed the world building and how this author went about doing it in a way that didn’t bombard me with too much back story. It was presented as it came and allowed for a good flow and pacing. I liked both the the h and H. I liked how she was vulnerable but not necessarily weak. I liked how the H grew to care for the h even though the h’s sister was considered superior and thrown at him. I liked their connection to each other as a friendship that developed into more.

The Not-So-Good: While I am going to continue on to the next book and still feel into in the story, I had moments of thinking that the time was drawn out a little too much. Overall, this part of the story takes place in a pretty small amount of time (specifically when the h and H are together) but it ended with a cliffhanger and a lot of unfinished business. I didn’t hate it or anything because I remained engaged — but I think that it could’ve been executed a little bit better in regards to timing.

The Bad: The only thing here is that I would’ve liked a little more steam. I liked the progression between these two, but I feel like there could’ve been some more stolen moments or something…I don’t need a ton, but more than what it was would be preferable.

Overall:I was looking for something to help with a book funk and this was a fun addition! I liked the author’s overall ideas and appreciated her storytelling. I will continue on to the next book and hopefully I’ll get some closure and steam 😏

Brief Summary of the Storyline: This is Faraine and Vor’s story. They meet when Vor saves Faraine and her brother from a Fae attack on the way back to their family home. Faraine has been living in a convent after embarrassing her family from a failed engagement. Vor is on his own way to arrange a marriage with Faraine’s family to help save his people. There are some dark forces against both rulers and they need an an alliance. There are some suspenseful scenes, some sweet moments, and a few sad times…and this ends on a cliffy.

Point Of View (POV): This alternated between Faraine and Vor’s POV.

Overall Pace of Story: Good for the most part (see “not so good” section above). I never skimmed.

Instalove: No, it takes a while to develop stronger feelings

H (Hero) rating: 4 stars. Vor. I liked him. I appreciated his caring for the h and how he was respectful of her needs.

h (heroine) rating: 4 stars. Faraine. I liked her. I appreciated her goodness and how she was protective even when it hurt herself.

Sadness level: Low, no tissues needed

Push/Pull: Yes

Heat level: Low. They have one scene with kissing and some touching towards the end.

Descriptive sex: No

OW (Other Woman)/OM (Other Man) drama: Yes, but not in the typical way

Sex scene with OW or OM: No

Cheating: No

Separation: No, I don’t really consider them together to be considered “separated”

Possible Triggers: Yes

Closure: This ends on a cliffhanger with the next book, Vow of the Shadow King, that is not yet released. It also looks like a trilogy and I didn’t realize it 🤦🏻‍♀️

Safety: This one should be Safe for most safety gang readers
Profile Image for Ruby Dixon.
Author 161 books19.7k followers
Read
April 19, 2022
Really enjoyable and scratches the ACOTAR itch a lil!
Profile Image for Moon.
485 reviews
March 22, 2022
I don't think this book was for me. While I am fine with a story ending on a , however, I did not care for how fickle Vor behaved. One minute, he wanted Faraine. The next, he all but pushed her out of his mind to admire/ogle her sister... for the good of his people! I don't care that If you truly want someone in your life, I mean, truly want them, you fight for them. You tell them. Vor didn't even bother to fight for Faraine until it was too late. He acted .

The book started out strong. It gave me strong Grace Draven Radience vibes. But things slowly went downhill after that. Faraine says that she loved him [Vor] and I thought to myself, "How? Why?" and "When?" Also for characters who were supposed to be Fae, they didn't act much like the Fae at all. 2 stars.
Profile Image for And Sometimes Books.
12 reviews29 followers
March 23, 2022
I’ve been umming and ahhing over whether or not to DNF this for weeks, and I’m finally biting the bullet and admitting defeat.

Basically I got to 50% and at 50% in the story it goes from being a really sweetly built up romance between a Troll King and the wrong Princess to something extremely dark and frightening.

A Thing happens that I felt came out of nowhere, was brutal and abrupt, and ultimately overshadowed the entirety of the rest of the book for me. I don’t want to spoil it because if I have to label this review as a spoiler people won’t see it and be forewarned - as I wasn’t - that this book gets really disturbing out of nowhere. If you have any kinds of triggers around loss of bodily autonomy this will probably be very upsetting and even traumatic(which I didn’t know was a thing, but apparently very much is for me).

It also has the unpleasant side-effect of making the rest of the book feel slightly non-consensual, because both characters are either being lied to or do not have control over their own body, so there is a feeling of a lack of informed consent. It makes the entire romance feel wrong, and honestly made my skin crawl.

When I pre-ordered the book (off the back of binging the Moonfire Bride and the Sunfire King) I was also of the impression it was a standalone. On Goodreads it wasn’t listed as being part of a series, and Amazon didn’t indicate that either. I began to suspect it was a duology, but from subsequent social media posts it now looks to be a trilogy. I am not willing to sit with the unpleasant feelings this book gives me if it doesn’t resolve satisfactorily in this book. I’m not carrying that discomfort for two years waiting for sequels. I went in expecting one story, and it both changed the type of story it was telling and offered me no conclusion to help me mitigate or manage the horror I felt reading it, so I’m out.

I’m sad because I love the main characters, but I just found it too much.
Profile Image for CC.
198 reviews62 followers
March 14, 2024
An immersively transportive and beautiful fantasy romance.

I completely adore Vor + Faraine's development and chemistry - it's more on the slow-burn side but not achingly slow ;) (although, let's be honest, that ending is TOO CRUEL xD - I mean that in a reader's heart-wrenching way... it's very well done and this series is obviously intended to be read back to back <3).

Mercedes crafts a beautiful subterranean Shadow-Under World for the troldfolk (trolls - but much more elegant and refined and advanced - I thought this twist is awesome!) and I love all the scenic descriptions that do not drag out the story. I really like their unique names and diction and culture in contrast to the human world.

The dual 1st Person POV is written very well and Mercedes' prose is impeccably elegant yet still fast-paced. For me, this is certainly a wonderful and eagerly-awaited change in prose/tone compared to her Eros/Pysche retelling, OF CANDLELIGHT AND SHADOWS duology.

Faraine is relatable and admirable in her long-suffering and patient responses - all without being weak - she's the catalyst/supportive sort. (Slight spoiler but I really liked the emotional connection ability she has and how that's weaved with Vor and the story as a whole!) And Vor is irreproachably honorable and competent (and NOT the #badboy type, which is a refreshing aspect, since he's anything BUT boring) despite his struggles dealing with the looming trolde curse as the Shadow King. This overarching terror implied by the curse throughout the story is brought to the forefront in the final act will certainly be revealed and resolved more in the next book - so I can't wait!!

--


Content: This is Mercedes' debut in the New Adult genre. And the story's overall tone reflects this. So I'd recommend this for mature audiences/adults only due to the overall mature tone of the book in regards to the arranged marriage. And specifically a rather intensely intimate wedding night scene in one chapter - there's no sex but there's quite a bit of descriptive buildup, so to speak (i.e. kissing and caressing). There are also some repeated swearing in trolde fashion (meaning we don't know what those words mean). And although the banter between Vor and his rakish brother Sul are quite fun, the latter is quite persistent in his innuendos. There is mention/use of fantasy alcohol-equivalent.

(Overall, I personally consider everything well done still in regards to the story at hand. But do realize that this is not for young adult readers, although, to be honest, sadly many young adult books today feature the same or even higher level of content.)
Profile Image for Jenn (The Book Refuge).
2,667 reviews4,489 followers
December 16, 2024
So, I'm a bit conflicted about this one. I know that it is part one in a trilogy, so there isn't SUPPOSED to be much resolution. There is just something that is nagging at me.

Let's start with a few things I liked.

I enjoyed the first 1/3 to 1/2 of this book. I liked the meeting of Vor and Faraine. It was romantic and I understood how they became instantly connected. Their chemistry was palpable and they both feel like outsiders in their families. It was great and it got me hooked. I love how easily they talk and how Faraine is able to calm him. It was an engaging start.

I even liked the idea of the arranged marriage to her younger sister at first. The conflict is there and it adds an angst.

But then.. well, I was very frustrated for the rest of it. I think my biggest issue comes from the reasoning that has Faraine becoming a substitute Bride. There is an odd time jump mid chapter and it was extremely jarring. There also was NOT enough of a reason for her to keep such a secret from him. I know there is supposed to be this pressure for the safety of her kingdom but nothing about her interactions with Vor make me believe that it was a good idea. It makes Faraine look unintelligent.

Just my opinion.

I know it's very possible that future books will work through this. I get it. But I have to WANT to continue to discover that. And because I don't understand Faraine's motivation for getting us into this situation.. I don't care to continue and I don't know if I will.

Everything in the second 1/2 of this novel was SO frustrating. I was rolling my eyes and cringing. I could see how it was all going to play out and frustrated when it did.

As of now, I'm not sure if I will continue.


3.5 stars
1 on the spice scale

CW: Loss & Grief, Parental neglect

*Thank you to the author for an ARC of this title.*
Profile Image for Rachel Rowell.
195 reviews74 followers
March 31, 2022
This was a really compelling story! I’ve read a few of Sylvia’s books and I would say this is the best one to date.

The beginning felt very reminiscent of Radiance by Grace Draven, but the story quickly took on a life of its own (and a considerably darker tone).

Pacing did feel rather slow through the middle of the book...partly , I’m sure, because of my anxiety to see how the plot would unfold. And now I’m left hanging until the sequel is out this summer!

~SPOILERY PREDICTIONS ~

- Will Vor forgive Faraine? (Ofc he will but Sylvia is gonna make us work for it)
- Are the sisters really dead? (I don’t necessarily think so - my rule in fiction is if a major character dies off screen, they’re not dead until we see a body)
- How will the trolde people stop the curse? (I think the answer lies with Faraine - her powers quite obviously resonate with the stones in the Under Lands. This is likely why she was given her gods-gift in the first place - it’s her destiny to be the trolde Queen. Just gotta make sure her backstabbing dad doesn’t get her killed first 😒)
Profile Image for Kelley.
1,281 reviews10 followers
May 1, 2022
The first half of this book is just perfection. 4-5 stars. The world-building is beautiful. The character development is deep and interesting. The romance between the two main characters is slowly built and feels very special because of how believable it is. As I was reading the first half of the book, I was drawn into the conflict and was SURE that this was going to be a 5 star read for me.

However, at the halfway mark, something big happens and the book becomes full of deception between the two main characters. Unfortunately, I just did not like that twist. It made me sick to my stomach and reluctant to keep reading. I set the book aside for a bit and then skimmed the rest to see if it went the way I was afraid it might. It did.

I'm not sure if I'm going to go back and read this one. I'm putting it down as a DNF for now. However, I really liked Sylvia Mercedes writing, so I will probably try a different one by her.
Profile Image for Sara Machado.
438 reviews297 followers
September 27, 2023
“It is my belief that no thing of beauty should ever be caged, princess.

Both humans and Troldes are in danger, for mostly unknown reasons, and hope to secure a future with an alliance, through a marriage between a Human princess and a Trolde king.

The romance starts quite early in the book, and from that point, it is full of pinning until the end. It might appear to be a bit insta love, but both characters POV help understand the relationship development, and make you root for them.

I really enjoyed the secondary characters, and appreciate their contribute to the story pace and dynamics.

I loved that the world building happens organically, and we discover everything along with the characters, never feeling overwhelmed with information.

There’s a part of the story that is not making much sense to me, or at least I’m not convinced of it, but I’ll have to wait and see.

Personally, this amount of angst, with no pay-off, leaves me quite anxious. I get very impatient, and just want to grab the characters heads and force them to speak and work their issues immediately.
I tend to favor a happy ending on the first book, instead of a slow burn romance throughout the series. In any case, I enjoyed the story and found the setting original and beautiful.

I am curious enough to discover more of this world and continue the series.

If you like Fae, slow burn and Romantasies full of angst, this book is for you. It is also a good fit for people who enjoyed The bridge kingdom.

3.5 ✨

I would like to thanks Daphne Press and NetGalley for the opportunity to read this ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Jes Drew.
Author 87 books526 followers
March 12, 2022
I am newer to Sylvia Mercedes (though an age-old fan to her previous pen name), and I have been reading her books nonstop. So when she was offering ARC copies of the first book to a new series, I fought my way onto the list, and here we are.

The world: This is my second time reading from this world, and in this is a different slice of it from my previous visit. Here I get to see a beautiful dichotomy of a medieval human surface world under attack by unicorn-riding Fae, and a majestic underground Trolde world under siege by a dark, insidious evil. The sheer level of difference between these worlds was staggering, and watching the characters from each learn the others' cultures was fantastic world-building.

The characters: We get the tale through two first-person POVs, which is my favorite construct. Prince Faraine was a very relatable character as she dealt with her empathetic powers, crazy family, and her lot in life with quiet grace. Then there is King Vor, ever noble and strong and sacrificial. Faraine has her four sisters... er, I mean three sisters and a brother. And Vor has his own brother with whom we both shared a love-hate relationship. He is absolutely hilarious, but I was right there with Vor threatening to smash his face in every two seconds. And Vor's loyal captain is also fantastic. I want to see more of them and all the other characters in this web of intrigue between two courts.

The chemistry: Better buckle-up, because there was a lot of this. So much that there came a point where I was just wincing because I knew that when it all came crashing down, that chemistry was going to be a lethal weapon that would come back on each of the protagonists. Forbidden love and slow burn to train-wreck in progress.

The stakes: Fae oblivion on one side and darkness oblivion for the other. Everything is hinged on a marriage between two strangers. But the chemistry might be the biggest obstacle. Also, the court intrigue. Lots of that, too.

The twist: All I can say is, I better not have read what I thought I read. Miss Mercedes better fix some things in the second book and undo the terrible- lies, I'm sure it was just lies- or else I am going to be Put Out.

The cliffhanger: Wait, what? I don't want to see a cliffhanger. I want book two. Now. Yesterday. Come on, now. *Breathing exercises*
Note to more sensitive readers: This book had some bad language, violence, horror elements, and STRONG romantic themes (but it did not go too far).

Review first published on my blog: https://agencyofbooksandspies.blogspo...
Profile Image for Danielle Pulliam .
480 reviews77 followers
March 15, 2024
I very much enjoyed this first book in the series! The story starts with a young human princess who is not well liked by her father, the King, and her mother, the Queen, more or less ignores her. She's sent to a convent when her first engagement doesn't work out.

Her father forces her into an engagement with the Shadow King for political alliance. The Shadow King takes her home to his people who live in an elaborate underground cave system, but not everything goes as planned.

I immediately started the second book! I couldn't put these books down.
Profile Image for Kalena ୨୧.
895 reviews527 followers
February 17, 2025
⋆.˚✮ 4 stars ✮˚.⋆

⤿ Thank you to Ace Books and Berkley Romance for the arc through netgalley in exchange for an honest review!

I've heard about Sylvia Mercedes and her books in the book community for some time now, especially as she's often many people's favorite indie author. I had not had the pleasure of reading her books before because I usually read largely print books from publishers, but the Bride of the Shadow King series recently was given new covers by Ace and I'm thrilled to have been given access to the trilogy. Personally, I'm a big romantasy lover when it's done right so this book had me intrigued from the beginning, but it turned out to be not what I was expecting.

Princess Faraine is the eldest daughter of her kingdom but has been shunned by her father due to her gods-gift (or chronic illness) getting in the way of marriages and political moves. She has learned to give her three other siblings her place, and when the Shadow King comes looking for an alliance, she is not surprised that it's her sister her father's parades. Though not his first choice, King Vor is willing to do anything to gain access to the human mages who may be able to rid a horror threatening his people, including marrying a human princess. When disaster strikes, Faraine is forced to take her sister's place unbeknownst to King Vor, and must keep up the facade or else ruin her husband, and her kingdom's chances, of an alliance.

This story was so easy to read, and I mean that in a good way! The chapters were relatively short and there was always some event (however small) that was moving the story along. I never felt like the reader was sitting stagnant waiting for things to happen. That being said, there was less intense action than I thought there would be, but I found myself not minding this. Getting to know the main characters, their families & friends, as well as the kingdoms they would be a part of was done well to set up even more expansion in the coming books.

I do wish there had been a bit more worldbuilding in general, but only because I found myself intrigued by what was presented to the reader. The Shadow King is a trolfolk, aka 'trolls' as we know them but to them, that's a slur, but they look more like elves or fae. I found this to be a nice fresh take on some folklore creatures, the trolfolk reminds me of dwarves in their cities and culture, so it felt like the author mashed together some ideas and came up with something unique I had never read before. Hopefully, there will be even more expansion in the coming books as I had fun learning about these cultures so far!

For being a romantasy book, I was shocked to learn that there were no spicy scenes in this book. There is one towards the end that got a bit steamy, but nothing happened that I would consider 'spicy'. After reading more romantasy books last year, I honestly can say this was refreshing. There was lots of pining and thinking about one another in this book, and it feels like the romance is going to be slow-burn for a while. That's one of my favorite tropes, so seeing it done realistically was very entertaining, and I am rooting for the main characters.

Some of the characters in this book felt deeper than others, but I enjoyed seeing the story and romance through both of the main characters, Fairane and Vor. We need more dual pov romances, especially in romantasy, and they were an excellent example of that. Fairane has her god-gift which essentially acts as a chronic illness in this world, and even with the disrespect from her family, she stayed strong as a sister and friend. For being called the "Shadow King", Vor was very respectful and kind to everyone, and I loved this little twist. Oftentimes characters who are given that title end up being in the vein of enemies to lovers, and "darkness" but it was refreshing to see him be the opposite of that in most scenes.

Overall, I enjoyed my time reading this book and I am intrigued for the rest of the series!

trigger warnings: death of loved ones, murder, captivity, blood and gore, war themes, abuse mentioned
Profile Image for Elena Rodríguez.
1,188 reviews492 followers
April 20, 2023
+3
“The whole world seems to exhale despair”.

Buscaba algo que leer simple y ligero para leer de noche, últimamente mi cerebro a esas horas ya no puede más y lo menos que necesita es lecturas densas y pasar el rato. Me fui a mi lista de libros y me acordé de este libro. Me dije para sí: “¿Por qué no? La portada no atrae nada, pero has leído libros peores con portadas bonitas y lo contrario, portadas horribles y el libro acaba siendo de lo mejorcito, además, Elena, ¿qué pierdes, las neuronas? Ya casi no te quedan, así que adelante".

“Only weak men feel the need to hide such strenght behind close doors”.

Como suele ocurrir, me sorprendió bastante. La historia es cliché como tal, pero la autora le da un giro de 45º (bueno un pequeño rodeo) y la verdad es que le quedó bastante decente. Ha habido cosas que, sinceramente, las he visto cogidas por los pelos y otras totalmente gratuitas y falta profundidad, pero, en general le doy mi aprobado. Además, que he leído libros el doble y el triple de peores y tienen más fama que esto.

description

El final sobre todo te deja con ganas de más y yo me fui directa al segundo. ¿Mejora? Sí, sigue siendo igual de interesante pero bueno ya dejaré dicha opinión para su correspondiente reseña.

“I would only hope that even a wild bird might be convinced to remain ot its own free will. And a man who truly cared for such bird would be honored to do everything in his power to convince it”.

En conclusión, ¿lo recomiendo? Sí. Pero, siempre hay un, pero, es como dije al principio la portada no ayuda. Estoy segura que si se hacía un cambio, muchas de mis amistades lo leerían, sin lugar a dudas y les gustaría.

“There will be a light in the end”.
Profile Image for Enchanting Literature.
310 reviews15 followers
June 2, 2022
Ok let’s start off with the fact that I never do my homework before starting a book. So I was shocked when I realized this was a series instead of the standalone tiktok made it out to be. I’m not as disappointed as I thought I’d be now that it’s been a few minutes since I finished 😂 It’s a great story with great characters so I’m here for more. This is my first book by Sylvia Mercedes but I don’t think it’ll be my last. I mean I need something to hold me over until the next one comes out.

After looking at the reviews I should’ve done a little bit of homework for this series just because there are themes I think a lot of people won’t like. I personally haven’t found any triggers for myself and read many many different types of books so take that as you will. Yes there’s deceit and lying between the characters but unlike other reviewers I found it very interesting. Both characters battled their personal feelings against their royal obligations while trying to continue the facade one is leading, and that is always interesting to see played out in a story but it does murk up the consensual aspect between the characters.

I’ve seen a lot of reviewers mention for being fae they don’t act like fae. That’s because they’re not fae. They’re trolls guys. I mean the common enemy between the main characters and why the arrangement came into play was because the fae are both of their enemies. So if you’re picking this up for the Fae aspect like I did you might be disappointed. Trolls are classically beautiful in this story similar to the fae but where most Fae stories dive into the backstory and share similarities courts, power, exc the Trolls in this story are vastly different while sharing some similarities with a full fledge Fae story. They rely more on their brute strength and size versus magic use. Kind of more using their surrounding magical items like Crystal to harness power than having magic themselves. As someone who picked this up for the Fae aspect I wasn’t disappointed but be warned it’s not a full fledge Fae story. But I do have thoughts on that which maybe the author will be using for a spin off. 🙏😉

The writing is simple yet beautiful. Mercedes weaves a magical world with gray characters that creates something you can easily get lost in for a few hours without getting a headache trying to keep up with the dimensions of the world.

Mayybe it’s because this was my first fantasy read in a while that I found this book really good. Or maybe it’s actually that good. Either way I am invested and I can not wait for the next book to see just how good this series comes together.
Profile Image for daemyra, the realm's delight.
1,290 reviews37 followers
November 20, 2022
Me: Let's be open to what the author is giving.
Also Me: 61% and we're still at memories of that one time y'all held hands at night?! 🔫🔫😩

Look... I'm into it up to a certain point but what is it with paranormal and fantasy romances thinking it's ok for romance to be so, so, SO understated? Bride of the Shadow King isn't the worst of them but with a cover like that, a plot like that, and then opportunities in the text that present themselves for the hero and heroine to do a lot more together... it's just disappointing.

I'm disappointed in that there wasn't any physical intimacy but also that what romance we get is boring and predictable. As I was reading this, I was invested in the story but at the 50% mark, and we're still dragging out the wedding negotiations with both lovelorn leads covering the same ground that was established in chapter two. We get it. Heroine wants to be with hero but is an outsider. Hero wants heroine but needs to marry the right daughter to have leverage over the king. Can we add on to this rather than repeat it in different ways?

I skimmed this to the end. A shame cos the world-building is interesting - a take on troll folk i.e. troldefolk. They are a subterranean folk. Heroine is human with a god's gift to do with crystal and energy - I'm sure she ends up being the perfect bride for the hero and helps them get rid of the mysterious stone affliction to the skin. Not continuing on.
Profile Image for Jane.
Author 1 book20 followers
April 28, 2022
Was not a fan. The story was soooo slow. Too much so for me.
24 reviews
April 13, 2022
First, let me say this story sucked me in completely, and like other stories from this author, I had visceral reactions while reading it. For that, I want to love it- however, I'm feeling so frustrated by the end of this book and the synopsis I read about the second book. Warning, there will be spoilers below.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Vor's reaction to discovering he married Faraine is so frustrating. First, he liked her, even more than Ilsevel, so I'm first questioning why he is so enraged (at her) in the first place. I can understand his initial anger and frustration over being misled by THE KING WHO ORDERED THE DECEPTION, but come on, as royalty, he should know that Faraine had NO CHOICE, not just because he's already met the King and has seen how he's treated Faraine, but also because, as a sovereign, your life is not your own if you truly care about your people, and even if Faraine had been hesitant, she would have done it for the sake of her people and the alliance. I'm certain Vor would have done the EXACT SAME THING if put in Faraine's position, and it's annoying that he is not thinking about that and that no one else is pointing it out to him (and I REALLY want it to be Faraine pointing it out him). It's also frustrating to see him treat Faraine like crap now, just like her family has done to her. Except it's worse because her family was always blind to her, but Vor wasn't. So to see him behave so badly has made me so angry and dislike his character now. I want to see Faraine steal some of Ilsevel's fire and stand up for herself and tell Vor in no uncertain terms that he's being a terrible hypocrite and that she is far too good for him and he does not deserve her. He should be kissing her feet for continuing with the alliance, instead, he's treating her horribly. By the end of this, I want to see him laid low. I'm so tired of seeing men treat women terribly, feel lusty which chases their bad mood away, and cuddle up to the woman and then move on like nothing happened. NO. Vor needs to see and understand exactly how much Faraine has given up- for him, for his people, for her people. He needs to see how special she is and how much of a complete a** is being. He needs to beg for her forgiveness and then follow up with being a much better man than he currently is. Also, I'm getting REALLY FLIPPING TIRED of all this "Faraine's betrayal" nonsense. WHAT? Honestly, this wasn't a betrayal, it was a deception, and one that Faraine HAD NO DESIRE TO PARTICIPATE IN. (I read a goodreads review about that scene and I agree when you really think about it, it's terribly dark). I think the reason I'm most upset over this book is because Faraine is just as much a victim as Vor, but she's being made out to be such a bad person when she really doesn't have much fault. Truly, when thinking about the situation, Faraine has been treated WAY worse than Vor. If anyone has been betrayed, it's Faraine- betrayed by her family who should have loved her but tossed her aside and treated her terribly. Betrayed by her father who forced her into the deception of LOSING HER OWN IDENTITY. Betrayed even by Vor, who didn't give her the decency to truly hear her out and try to understand her position and instead throws her in a dungeon (I won't mention the almost execution since he was under the effect of poison at that time).

Vor's in the wrong here because he was more drawn to Faraine and wanted her, but realized that the alliance would go through with Ilsevel, so he PUT HIS PEOPLE FIRST, and made that choice. If Faraine had a choice at all (which she really wasn't given a choice, honestly) it was also FOR HER PEOPLE. They made the same choices. Vor is being a hypocritical ass for being so angry.

A betrayal implies that there was a relationship to betray. Their "relationship" if you want to call it that, should have given Vor more of a forgiving heart towards Faraine. I'd say his terrible reaction is more of a betrayal to Faraine, and worse, because his reaction is all on him.

I truly do not understand why Faraine being made out to be a villain here. And WHY is NO ONE pointing this out to the characters in the story? Are they all insane? Am I insane for realizing this? How is no one else mentioning this?

Last but not least, I am suspicious that I'll be even more angry about Faraine's treatment from Vor because I suspect that Faraine's sisters aren't really dead, and the King planned this all out from the beginning (because why would he give his most treasured daughter to a Trolde? It makes no sense and I wonder why no one in Vor's party thought to question this, especially since they didn't know about Faraine's failed attempt at a previous alliance). It's the perfect way for the King to win- he gets an alliance with Vor, keeps his treasured daughter, and gets rid of Faraine. So Faraine is the one being treated the worst here, by EVERYONE, and the one person who should be caring for her is being a complete asshat. The only way this series will be redeemed is if Vor has to completely grovel and beg forgiveness from Faraine, and she had better make him work for it.
Profile Image for Marlaina.
76 reviews8 followers
August 19, 2022
DNF@52%

I was sort of on board until they killed off the sister and made the MCF take her place and her face. And as I haven’t finished the book, I’m not sure if that actually happened or if the princess just planned it to run away?

Overall, I felt there was a lack of emotion in the book. I mean, I wasn’t expecting literature or anything, but, for instance, there didn’t seem to be any emotion evoked when talking about important characters dying, such as the sisters. Also, the emotional abuse heaped upon the MCF by her family and those around her is just not something I want to read about.

There was the whole f*cked up thing with the MCF’s father king and his mistress just flaunting it in front of the queen. But to “balance” it out, you have Sul the trolde who makes derogatory remarks…

And while the “love story” and “forbidden love” elements were there, it was taking so long to get there, and then, of course, you have to through in deception/s. The also complete lack of trying to understand the other culture was annoying, even though I realize both sides need something from the alliance.

Overall, if you are looking for a romance book, try something else. This one doesn’t even really have smutty parts to make up for the not-great story.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Atalántē.
274 reviews12 followers
December 30, 2024
Przez 70% się nudziłam, a przez 30% wkurwiałam. Nawet nie chce mi się pisać o tej książce, chcę zapomnieć. Żałuję, że nie zrobiłam tego DNF-a.
Profile Image for V.
78 reviews2 followers
April 9, 2022
Swoon worthy! Get ready to hang on to your seat :D

Reading this book made me feel like Bastian in "The Neverending Story." I was completely drawn into this incredible world! Sylvia Mercedes' writing engages the imagination so vividly, it's like a movie playing out in my mind. And this world, these characters, and their stories was an amazing rollercoaster of emotions! I loved it!

That moment when Faraine and Vor meet, I about died. And I was still totally unprepared for all the subsequent times I almost died from emotional heart failure throughout the rest of this book! Mercedes completely redefines what it means for a book to be a "slow-burn."

My go-to is enemies to lovers, but Bride of the Shadow King has definitely changed this for me! I absolutely loved the dialogue between Vor and Faraine, and their feelings felt authentic.  

The supporting characters kept me laughing and rooting for their own happy endings. I am so ready for Book 2 to bring on ALLLL the happy endings!!

Having read much of Sylvia Mercedes' other works very recently (It's like, if her books were movies, I basically crazy Netflix binged all her works after loving The Stolen Mage Bride), I jumped at the chance to get an ARC of Bride of the Shadow King (BotSK). Not only did her Instagram teaser quotes suck me in with a hint at a Beauty and the Beast arc, which I love, but I had just entered a black hole of waiting for the next book in the Prince of the Doomed City series, and BotSK delivered! I will be re-reading this after the official release, and I will also be purchasing the hardback. Her covers are so beautiful! 
Profile Image for Sentranced Jem.
1,228 reviews610 followers
May 13, 2022
Eh..
To be honest, it's an interesting start. But my interst kept fading in and out of the storyline.
I'm curious to know what will happen in the next book but not curious enough to jump right into it as soon as it releases.
Profile Image for Ewa (Fedra).
306 reviews22 followers
November 4, 2024
3,5
Byłoby 4, gdyby pewien oszukańczy motyw nie zaszedł aż tak daleko i nie odbił się tak mocno na parze głównych bohaterów (głównie w sferze uczuć).
Profile Image for sonyatka.
15 reviews12 followers
February 10, 2025
Zbyt wiele rozterek i przebywania w głowach bohaterów jak na mój gust. Lubię emocje wynikające z umiejętnie poprowadzonej narracji, nie lubię natomiast oklepanego motywu empatii i narracji pierwszoosobowej. Pomysł na świat Mythanaru tego nie uratuje, a szkoda.
Profile Image for Katie.
64 reviews1 follower
July 12, 2022
No. I didn't finish this. Ms. Mercedes' writing may be something for some people, but it's not for me. And I will make sure I don't start another one of her books again by mistake. Her books are not my cup of tea nor are they ever what the summary advertises it to be.

I got this book on Kindle Unlimited and I didn't realize that this was the same author as the Moonfire Bride and Sunfire King--I deeply disliked both of those books. From what I can tell, the author knows how to write budding romance very well, but doesn't know how to write a solid ending without making everything absolutely terrible and borderline creepy first. Not like in an adventurous way, but like "needless murder of innocents, needlessly lying, and borderline non-consensual romance" type of way. All because the author doesn't want the heroine to seem like a Mary Sue. She ruins any sort of budding romance by making the man seem like a genuine, loving book-boyfriend who just wants to be happy and make his love happy and then she makes the heroine the worst example of humankind for no reason other than poorly executed "drama."

So I got about 170 pages in and I realized things were going in a direction that Moonfire Bride did. A King (with relatively modern thinking in a un-modern world that makes you fall in love with him as a reader), just trying to protect his people, makes a choice that he doesn't agree with but does anyway because he must do it for the safety of his kingdom. Then the heroine lies to him (in some way or another because the author thinks they only way to make them interesting is to make them selfish about the dumbest things), making the king make a political mistake that has very serious (two more books worth) of needless drama just so we can have book two turn into a BAD enemies to lovers trope. When I got to the "heartfasting" scene, it started getting eerily similar to Moonfire Bride, and I finally looked it up here on Goodreads.

Seeing that it was the same author using the same bad formula make me immediately DNF it.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,708 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.