CW: violence, spice, mention of DV, some others.
Thank you so much to the author for allowing me to a part of the ARC team! “The Voyant and the Mark of Malice” releases April 29, 2024!
It’s the love child of “Pirates of the Caribbean” and “Aladdin,” but make it a little spicy. How can you not love that?
When Captain Rahmi Abada hears of a way to break his curse, to live immortality on the seas without having to sacrifice souls to Liddros, he leaps at the opportunity. There’s just one catch—he’ll need a djinn, and Liddros has warned that they’re both rare and dangerous. Kalia Salam has a secret—she’s a Voyant, a magic user who can invade the minds of others and leave visions in her wake. Stuck in perpetual servitude in a brothel, Kalia keeps her secret closely guarded. After an unfortunate encounter leads Rahmi’s men to abduct Kalia, thinking her to be the djinn they so desperately need, Kalia knows she’ll need to think fast and keep her secret even closer if she wants to survive Rahmi’s quest.
I love Sadie Hewitt’s books. This is the second in the “Aeglecian Sea” series that I’ve been able to ARC read, and the fourth overall, and they never fail to make me go completely feral. Naturally, this one was no exception. So you could save yourself some time by not reading this review and instead immediately launching into the nearest book by this author that you can find. If a general “oh my god, it’s amazing” isn’t enough of an argument, though, read on so I can convince you.
I’m going to start off with what I would consider to be the ‘weakest’ of the plot-characters-world trifecta that I look at when rating stories. And by ‘weakest,’ I mean that it would have earned a 4.9 on a 5-point scale: The world building. My one request from book 1, “The Audient and the Phantom Night,” was that I wanted more information about this universe. I wanted to know about its people, about why magic was outlawed, everything. I wanted to know because the rest of the story was so good that I didn’t want it to be over. “Voyant” has both somehow fixed this issue and made it so much worse. Fixed, because we get an amazing amount of information, and made worse because *I still wasn’t ready to be done*. The details and descriptions we get throughout this story brought it to life in an incredibly visceral way, to the point where I could almost smell the salt as I was reading. “Audient” did a great job with a story that was almost exclusively on a ship, but “Voyant” takes us off the ship multiple times and to different locations, and all of them feel even more lifelike than the last. We got to see more of the workings of the kingdom in Kalia’s homeland and we got more of the inner workings behind the pirate captains and their curse. We even got to see a little more of the magic ban and the effects it’s had on the kingdom. I loved all of it.
The middle ground of my trifecta is the plot. I simply could not put this book down, which meant I read the whole thing in 2 sittings and could have easily finished it in one except for, you know, real life being needy. We know early on in the story what the basic plot is going to be— locate and acquire a djinn, locate and acquire the way to break the curse, the end. Except, nothing is ever that easy, and the journey from ‘djinn’ to ‘the end’ was nothing at all like you might have expected. There were so many fun steps along the way, and I was constantly ready to see what was going to happen next. It’s a fast-paced book, but it never felt rushed and it never bogged down. There’s a good balance between the action and the character development, so it was easy to stay engaged. It’s a fun ride, and one that I could easily see myself re-reading in the future.
Everything about this book was amazing, but the heart and soul of the story, and really the strongest part of all of this author’s works, is the characters. I could rave for hours about how much I love them and I’m still not sure I’d get it all in one try. We have two MCs, Rahmi and Kalia, and the story is told with both of them being the focus (it’s dual-POV, but in the third person, which is my favorite). The side characters are all amazing supports that help make the story even more incredible, but Rahmi and Kalia far and away steal the show. Our MMC is fierce and intuitive and almost arrogant in his confidence. Our FMC is arguably even more ferocious, unwilling to trust anyone, and a total powerhouse in her own right. As individuals they’re so much fun to read about, and I constantly found myself laughing at something one of them said or did, but when paired together they’re a little bit terrifying with some epic levels of ‘make me’ subtext. I could read about them traumatizing their enemies forever.
At the end of the day, you have to choose for yourself whether you want to read this book or not, but there’s only one right answer, in my humble opinion. So if you like a heroine who can and will make you run screaming from your own mind (and who will do so in defense of others way more often than she’s willing to admit), or a pirate captain who will let nothing stand between him and his goal, or if you just really enjoy pirate stories with magic in them, then this is the book for you. The “Aeglecian Seas” books are interconnected standalones, so you can read them in any order, but I would suggest starting with book 1 so you can avoid minor spoilers in book 2.