Thank you to Orbit Books and Edelweiss for the advanced reader copy in exchange for an honest review.
The Oleander Sword follows the path The Jasmine Throne laid out for Malini, a prophesied empress at war with her brother, and Priya, thrice-born priestess and Elder of Ahiranya. The Jasmine Throne saw them parted as Malini started her quest for vengeance against the emperor, gathering allies and starting a war to determine Parijatdvipa’s fate, and Priya, Elder of Ahiranya, trying to find her footing with its new independence and using her newfound powers to keep the rot plaguing her country away.
But Priya promised Malini that if she ever needed her, she’d come.
When it becomes apparent that the only way to save both countries from the people who would rather see them burn is to work together, by using Malini’s cunning and influence and Priya’s raw power, Priya comes when called, even if it means leaving Bhumika, High Elder of Ahiranya, alone.
In Ahiranya, Bhumika is left to deal with not only the rot plague, and the turbulent and fragile rulership of a freshly freed country, but with an old threat reemerging, from the Age of Flowers, who threaten to consume everything the three women fight desperately to protect.
My first thoughts finishing this novel were: wow. Epic. Pain. [insert a bunch of expletives] but also: “Second book syndrome nowhere to be found!!”
I worried that since it’s been a long time since I read The Jasmine Throne, this book might be hard to pick up, but this proved fast-paced, easy to read, altogether addictive, and hard to put down. Every time I picked it back up, I’d read and keep telling myself “just one more chapter” and then I’d read another, and another. Like a woman possessed, I could not help but keep reading, to find out what happened next.
And easily, easily, better than the first book! Which is not to say that the first book was nothing less than very good, it’s just that this book was viciously, breathtakingly stunning and I can’t think of a single bad thing to say about it.
All three women had magnificent, compelling story arcs, centering around who they love, and what they must do. Priya, torn between her love for Malini, and her duty as an Elder. Malini, torn between her quest for vengeance and to liberate her empire and her feelings for Priya. Bhumika, torn between her love for her infant daughter and leading Ahiranya, dealing with the threat there. Absolutely nothing was held back as they each had to make agonizing choices that changed their fates forever. Malini deciding exactly how far she’ll go and who she may become in order to become empress, Priya deciding how far she can push her newfound powers to their limits and what will happen if she does, Bhumika deciding how to deal with forces worse than an oppressive empire. The cost and the effect of each impossible, weighty choice.
I felt their pain, their uncertainty, both their helplessness and their agency. Everything made sense. Everything hurt.
I loved the setting, how the magic and scenery were complimentary opposites. From the Empire’s holy fire, fervent prayer, and hot sun, to Ahiranya’s cool waters, verdant greenery, and pulsating life. Both the rot and the powers given by the deathless waters are so vividly described, they somehow manage to be otherworldly and ethereal, yet concrete and palpable.
And the magnetic, slow but inescapable, pull that Priya and Malini feel towards one another while Malini must embody an untouchable, godsent empress and they must focus on a war they have to win??? *chef’s kiss*
As always, no spoilers, but that ending…. PAIN.
The Oleander Sword was an impressively addicting sequel, filled with epic highs and anguished lows, scorching flames and creeping decay. A book that pushes the limits, asking the questions: What would you do for power, for love, for freedom? What would you sacrifice for it? What would you let yourself become? and demands answers. It is a shining example of what female-led and female-written high fantasy can be. I eagerly await Book 3 and will supplicate before Empress Tasha Suri, if need be.