I didn't have to read many pages before remembering why I adored book 1, Sacrificed. Wibberley does a fine job meriting her choice of heroine/protagonist, and making her part believable. Clio has grown between the end of the first book and the beginning of this one, obviously, since a year has passed, but still! She is accepting her duty, if not embracing it, *sigh*, and she is no crybaby either, having managed to prove herself worthy of her fellow warriors' acceptance.
Being a romantic fantasy, it's a given that the story is in part a "love-thing" - but, fortunately, it's also a very compelling story, interesting, cunning and action packed, and not only in regards to the various enemies. There's also Clio's past to be unraveled. In fact, Forsworn, comes off even stronger, than the first book, and offers a riveting continuance to the story.
Wibberley tells a compelling tale ... There's ONE time, when a sentence annoyed me: "Her breath escaped her chest's fleshy prison, lost to the tender and violent breeze that whipped her hair from her hood, slapping and caressing her face." But obviously that one phrase is of no importance at all, it's just me being nitpicky, and other than that, there's nothing at all to complain about, the book is simply just awesome and it's all too easy to get lost in the story, and thus forget about prose, or sleep, or one's surroundings and whatnot.
Also interesting characters and some very nice plot twists. I would especially like to praise the characters - All of them, even the villains, are well-developed and three-dimensional. It's nice when the protagonist isn't all perfect, and the villain isn't pure evil! And even the characters in between hold the possibility of being either/or, thus making the story more interesting and less obvious. Clio's growth throughout is amazingly well founded, she's becoming stronger, wiser and more emphatic, and even the romantic parts seem varranted in regards to supporting her finding footing and growing into the kinda person she wants to be. Furthermore this romance is rather likable, and definitely not mushy-annoying.
It kinda reminds me of Marie Rutkoski's The Winner's Crime. Though the two aren't in any way identical stories, Forsworn do have likenesses to some of the greatest parts of TWC.
Anyways, if you like alternate worlds - read it! If you like great characters - read it! If you like romancy - read it! If you like awesome fighting sequences - read it! Same goes if you like fantasy, but you might want to make sure to read Sacrificed first, as to not miss out on anything.