WARNING: will contain spoilers for books 1 and 2 in the series.
I have to admit, this series drifted a bit from what I expected it to be when I read the first book. King's Property was slower in pace than the next two installments in the series, but I found it to be thought-provoking with a strong heroine and an important message. Over the course of the series, the trilogy changed into something that looked more like the run-of-the-mill fantasy, complete with prophecies and villains of unrelenting evil. Royal Destiny was still engaging and fun to read, but my beloved Dar held the idiot ball at times, while many of the other characters felt one-dimensional at times.
At the end of Clan Daughter, the human Dar was (temporarily, she assumed) made Queen of the Orcs when the former queen was murdered by a treacherous sorcerer, who held the human king in his sway. The sorcerer Othar was also slain, it seemed (though we readers knew better), as was King Kregant, leaving behind his wife Girta to act as regent for his son, Kregant III. Dar, seemingly mortally wounded, returns to the orcs to pass on the mystical Fathma to the next queen, but instead is healed and remains queen herself. This, of course, causes conflict among the orcs, who don't trust this washavoki (human)-born queen, and Dar is threatened with having to prove her legitimacy, which may be fatal. Meanwhile, Othar, who is not dead, but transformed and his powers increased, has found some new allies, including the baddy from the first book, Kol. Who just so happens to have the Queen Girta's ear . . .
I can't help but wonder what I would have thought of the second and the third books in this series, if I hadn't read them after I watched the movie Avatar. Like that movie, the Queen of the Orcs trilogy is about a human assimilating to a fantastical nature loving culture, and then saving it from his/her own kind. Dar is the rescuer of the orcs, not merely because she's queen and thus has their obedience, but because the orcs don't understand such concepts as lying, deceiving, or treachery, which the humans readily use. The orcish culture is painted so idyllically as to be unbelievable, although perhaps the prejudice against Dar, particularly from the mother of her would-be lover, is an attempt to remedy this. It doesn't work, as the humans are also prejudiced, and with much less reason, as well as being greedy, patriarchal, and warmongering. No wonder Dar prefers the orcs.
I do, however, wish that candy-coating of the orcs and their society hadn't been at the expense of the human characters who weren't Dar. Queen Girta, for example, seems like an intelligent woman, but then Kol wraps her around his little finger with no effort at all. Kol himself was a far more complex character in book 1, when he was a bastard, true, but a complex and believable bastard, with an attraction to Dar's strength while at the same time wanting to break her. It would have been interesting to read him acting out these tendencies with Girta as well, but instead, all Kol seems to want is power and war. He, like many of the other characters, often acts to move the plot forward, rather than as is consistent with his established personality. Even Dar does this at times, making me wonder if the author got tired of the series by this point and simply wanted it to be over with.
I'm glad I read this trilogy, for book 1 especially, but books 2 and 3 were also fun to read. The story is still entertaining, the orc culture idealized but still interesting, and the plot does keep you reading. If the final result is not as deep as I'd hoped, it's still a good, escapist fantasy with better world-building than most.