3.5 Stars
Deep in the jungles of Sipan, the lives of a hermited peasant and a kidnapped empress are changed forever. Hope E. Davis’s romantasy novel, which takes place in a world of Incan-inspired mythology and political intrigue, is an absorbing book about Azucena, the empress of Sipan, and Ruroc, a peasant isolated in the jungle. Their lives collide when Azucena is drugged and kidnapped by her advisor, Yezema, in a bid to overtake the thrown. Unsure of who she can trust and doubting herself and her gods-given powers, Zu struggles to trust Ruroc and learns that she is capable of more than what she thought possible and what it means to be a true leader for her people.
I love a world steeped in mythology, and Incan lore-based novels are a rarity. So I was intrigued and excited to dive into this world. Davis peppers the book with Quechua (the modern indigenous language still widely spoken in Peru) vocabulary and is adept in her visual descriptions of Azucena’s palace. The reader gets a crash course in the daily grind for the ruling power of Sipan and honestly, this would be a marvelous movie setting. Azucena’s personal growth from spoiled and distant nepo-baby-ruler to a thoughtful and just ruler is powerful, and it’s great to see a book focused on a female leader whose beauty is an aside and not focused on. Ruroc is a worthy co-star, a marvelously gruff cinnamon roll of a love interest, who also goes on a personal growth journey of his own while he struggles with his own grief and adapting to the world he has been isolated from. The two have delightful chemistry and we are definitely rooting for the them to get over themselves and get together.
I would have loved for Azucena’s grief over her parents’ deaths and her internal struggles to be made obvious a little earlier in the novel. As it was, for much of the first third of the book, I found Zu kind of awful and was desperate for her redemption arc to begin. I knew it was Yezema who had drugged her and arranged her kidnapping immediately, so it surprised me that Zu was confused by it at all. I also felt a bit confused that Zu’s powers could be misunderstood or misused by her for so long, as well as the timeline of her parents’ deaths, her rule, and Yezema’s role. Was Yezema an advisor to Zu’s parents prior to her? Did she only have advisors because she was young? I felt as though many character and timeline building details could have been a bit sharper and honed more clearly for me as a reader. I also wanted more about Ruroc’s job - were there large animals that he and his father had to manage before? Were the only prisoners they dealt with the sacrificial people?
Ultimately, QOYA is a delightful story of intrigue and love in a world we don’t ever get to visit as readers. I just felt like there was something missing for me, or that the first part of the novel could have been tightened up with the backstory a bit more.
I received an advance review copy for free from the author, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.