Oracle Asylum is a tale spun around four great houses in the Kingdom of Itakaa—House of Veil, House of Life, House of Hail, and House of Blood. Each house must present a contender, and from these four, the next king or queen will emerge. But not all houses are created equal.
House of Blood sits at the bottom of the hierarchy, and its princess, Ekara, is far from the typical champion. While others wield fire and water in dazzling displays of power, Ekara is a cropper—her gifts lie in nurturing the earth. Less flashy, yes, but deeply rooted in something ancient. She sets her focus on the Prancing Ceremony (where maidens parade before eligible men in hopes of finding a husband) with no political ambitions, only personal ones.
But this book beautifully illustrates how the underdog can rise and become the main deal. Ekara is still reeling from the loss of her mother, and her relationship with her powers is laced with reluctance and grief. She isn’t eager to wield them—her heart is still in mourning. Yet, when it matters most, she steps into herself and channels her power with profound impact.
Enter Kazani, a man unraveling under the weight of madness—a curse that has consumed many from his ravaged village and now claws at his sanity. In a desperate bid for salvation, he pretends to be the revered Oracle, a figure believed to channel the gods themselves. He even walks on water to cement his deception, earning the villagers’ trust and awe.
Kazani summons the four contenders to the Oracle Asylum, not to crown royalty, but to find a cure—his cure. His plan is layered, his motives tangled in the ancient enmity between Itakaa and a rival village, Mao—a conflict born from the very gods that created them.
The author’s worldbuilding is immersive, the writing voice confident and lyrical. This was my first time reading her work, and while the story dragged a bit midway (yes, I had to step away and return with fresh eyes), it still held enough magic to pull me back. There were some narrative loopholes, but the duality between Kazani and Ekara—his madness to her earthiness, his deception to her quiet resolve—was captivating.
If you’re into African fantasy with layered characters, lush lore, and underdog redemption arcs, Oracle Asylum is a worthy pick.