4-4.5 stars
Omg this was nearly 600 pages long. As I was finishing this I was wondering how the author was able to fit so much more storytelling, plot and character development into this book than previous ones and sure enough this was longer than any other book in this series which makes sense since it was the last one, but wow.
This book had a much different feel for me than the previous books. Kara was a unique heroine and I loved her. She's the first human/Dakkari hybrid born 30 years ago and kept a secret by growing up sequestered in a remote temple her whole life meaning that she's only ever interacted with the priestesses and never met or talked to a man. Kara loves to read and believes pleasuring herself brings her closer to the goddess Kakkari so she's not a complete stranger to sexual pleasure or romance (at least accounts she's read between the pages of books), but she's still naive and her social skills are a bit limited. She was giving very much Rapunzel leaving her tower for the first time vibes, but like the R rated version. Once she meets Arik, the hero in this book, Kara's innocence coupled with her forwardness and lack of awareness of appropriate questions/interactions between newly acquainted men and women made for some pretty funny interactions. Naive, but sexually forward heroines are a comedy combo I enjoy and I loved seeing her shock Arik constantly.
Arik was a much needed character in this series. Finally we have a Vorakkar (though he was barely a horde king...iykyk) that loves the captial city, Dothik. Not only that, but he has grand plans for how to reshape society on Dakkar and build the capital up to it's full potential. We found out in the last book that Arik, one of the Dothikkar's bastards, survived to adulthood and duped the king by competing in the Vorakkar trials and succeeding all without him knowing who he really was (because he would've had him killed if he knew). Throughout this series all of the Vorakkars have loved the Wildlands, hated Dothik, constantly talking about what a shithole it is and how they could never imagine living there, but they all also hate the Dothikkar and want a new king so I was confused about how one of them could ever depose him because it didn't fit their character at all to take on that role. Finally Arik, the bastard Vorakkar steps up and makes a shitty Vorakkar if we're being honest, but he's the only really candidate who's passionate about the role of Dothikkar and he has the birthright to back it up so that was exciting.
*There will be some **spoilers** from now on*
Something this book didn't satisfy for me was why there were all these human queens all of the sudden. As a human (lol) I enjoy an alien H/human h pairing, it's fun and ~relatable~, but I think having Vorakkars fall in love with humans for the first time ever and all at the same time with no cosmic reason or explanation was a bit weird. Humans have been on this planet for over 30 years so why have all these human queens right now all at the same time? I was starting to feel bad for all these Dakkari women that wouldn't get to be horde queens this generation even though they were mostly depicted as power hungry hoes. Especially since we find out at the end of this book that only two of the human queens (+hybrid Kara) were important for the fog and healing of Dakkar. In each book even with the non-magical human queens there was usually some implication that the humans were 'selected by Kakkari' in some way for each horde king, but then if they didn't have an effect on the over arching plot what's the significance of them all being human? Random gripe, but I had to mention it.
Also, Kara is our first look into what a human/Dakkari hybrid actually looks like and it's a bit worrying in some ways because throughout the series there's been a lot of talk about Vorakkars wanting 'strong heirs', etc. so it's a little weird to have a hybrid who's described as "small and weak" compared to full Dakkari. I mean naturally that's what I expected when you combine a weaker species with a stronger one, but it doesn't seem promising for these babies in a race that prides physical strength and ability especially in these long lines of horde kings, but maybe that's something that will change now that Dakkar is changing? Idk. Since this was the last book I would've liked to check in more with previous couples and get to know the hybrid babies they're all popping out. I love pregnancy and kids in a book and lil alien hybrids would've been fun, but we were left hanging on that one.
Speaking of babies, something I've always wondered about on this planet is birth control. In previous books everyone always seemed so surprised that having sex constantly lead to pregnancy, but there was never any mention of prevention so I just figured birth control did not exist on this planet. But then finally in the last book one dude has the presence of mind to be like actually take this tea please I don't want babies, but jokes on him because the birth control did. not. work. 🤯 Why even bring up a birth control method in the ninth hour if it's magically not going to even do anything for your plot line? lol.
I think this book had the most depth in terms of plot and had a much different feeling than the other books in the series. There were very long thought out plans coming to fruition, secrecy, espionage, a coup. It all felt much more like a YA fantasy novel (plus smut), but in a good way. I was impressed by the more robust storyline and characters that were woven together to tell this final story. I was getting a little worried at the end about how it was going to come together romantically because Arik was really letting me down. I didn't think we were even going to get good grovel and I was pretty damn disappointed with his first attempt, but in the end he delivered.
Overall, this was a pretty satisfying ending to the series and I might be down for some spin-offs because I'm still so curious about all those hybrids...