I read the second book soon after the first, and they absolutely need to be read in order.
This book was far darker than the first, with themes of harm, guilt, torture, rape, a lot of violence. I'll include spoilers later, since it's hard to talk about the book without referring to events. I will assume readers have read the first book.
This takes place after the capture and enslavement of Isidro by the Akhadians. With Isidiro's help, Delphine and the Akhadians have discovered some of the old magical textbooks of Ricalan, and have gone to Demon's Spire to gather the main source of texts. Sierra has gone alone to be captured, in order to save Isidro, and prevent the Akhadians from access to the texts, the magical heritage of Ricalan, also in the hopes she can learn from them to control her own magic, and defeat Kell and Rasten.
My hesitance in giving this 5 stars was in part because the scenes in the Spire suffered somewhat from emotional dithering of the characters, and a bit of that trope of creating situations by not speaking to, or explaining your actions, to close allies/lovers. It's tricky to express the sense of isolation, and the hesitancy to talk because of expectations of response. I felt at times that a decision do act without saying anything was predictably going to have negative consequences. It was hard, given the time spent questioning the decision made me want to put the book down. I was unhappy with the way it was going, and the obvious problems it would create. At the same time, the exploration of emotions and character development was still a shining feature.
The other factor is that in the second part of the book, Sierra had so determined to follow a certain course of action, and armored her feelings to do so, that as a character she lost some of the intricacy of her inner life (Unlike other characters, Isidro, Delphine, who continued in their complexity). I was also a little sad that Kell was essentially just evil, with no context for his evilness. It was nice that this was not a Good vs Evil story, but even if Kell was only evil (not Evil), he was "pure evil". The other factor I couldn't understand is how Kell was so skilled. Rasten could do blood magic, Sierra was immensely powerful, but Kell's skill could somehow keep both in check. Where did he learn his skill? Why couldn't Rasten learn it, over a 10 year period?
It's still a wonderful book in an excellent series. I'm hoping to get the third book soon.
Spoilers follow
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I loved the development of the relationship between Delphine and Isidro, It seemed emotionally accurate. I thought the whole emotional roller-coaster up to and after Sienna nearly killed Isidro was emotionally tortured. It is the part that made me feel bad enough I put the book down for a bit.
Not at all sure about the sex scene with Rasten on her way out. I don't like that woman "overwhelmed by sex" element.
I did like the development of Rasten, particularly near the end when chasing Kell.
On the other hand, I'd have liked to see some process and development with Sierra in her confinement with Kell. Surely she may have learned things, even if she had to hide knowledge and power from Kell and Rasten. Just "learning to endure pain" doesn't seem like the element of mastery, and she became emotionally kind of static.
A few issues with plot:
Again, not sure what special magic Kell had that could outmatch Rasten and Sienna. It had a hard time making sense for me, that they could not overwhelm him when Sienna could draw on the injury and death of at least dozens, if not hundreds, of soldiers, but Isidro's arm was enough to power her. If Isidro had learned enough to untangle and draw on enchantments, not sure why Sienna would not have had that power, given her time studying the books and the fact that she studied with Delphi while confined to the repression room.
I did pretty much enjoy the end of the book, particularly Isidro's mastery of his own abilities. It did make me question why Sierra showed no similar abilities, particularly having access to the same book, and to teaching by Delphine.
I enjoyed the shift to fen and desert, though it raised issues for me. Ricalan seemed sub-arctic, and yet there are deserts at the same latitude just hundreds of miles to the east. Either Ricalan is simply Alpine, in which case I'm not sure it would be so cold, or there is something weird about the ecology generally. I like both environments, though more could have been written about the fen and desert environs. It's almost like Ricalan is Himilayan-like foothills with deserts to the east, and the fen the Indus delta, but in that case, it is far too cold in Ricalan, which has more the climate of the Canadian Rockies.
I liked the hints about the Akharian Empire and enjoyed what seemed like racial diversity between different groups, without actually being too specific, aside from dark hair for Ricalan's (I envisage Mongoloid) and Anglo colouring for Mesentreians, and darker skin tones for Delphine. I also enjoyed that Spurrier didn't go full-on with race. No real description of Delphine's hair, or her skin other than "darker complexioned". I enjoyed the hints of a more matrilineal polyandrous culture for the Ricalans.
A darker book overall, but not worse for that. The main issues I had were the pacing and dropping of some of Sienna's character development. Otherwise, a great read. :)
A few people have said they had difficulty following the plot. Not sure how, but your mileage obviously varies. Pretty clear, the Wolf clan was doing survival diplomacy, happy to trade access to the spire for an alliance, where they aren't being enslaved. It allows some leverage with the Mesentreians, who were dominating them, raiding them, and demanding conscripts. The leaders were also happy to sacrifice Sienna, not only a mage (and therefor evil) but a blood mage. Leadership was already sacrificing Mira in a political marriage, so switching allies and switching prospective husband's is par for the course. Mira of course had supported the rebels, but through her social position. The Mesentreians were stuffed, after Sienna attacked Kell. Both their king and their heir were dead, their troops killed, and their mage gone. That's a hug loss the Akhadians would take advantage of. So much for politics. Meanwhile, Cam (potentially king of Mesentreian forces) and Delhine were pursuing Isidro and Sienna to support/rescue them, since they are the only real force of power for the rebels. the three mages, with Cam politically, might restore Ricalan independence if they can restore mage-work. The four, with some help from minor characters, are basically at odds with all three political forces, and most closely aligned with a Ricalan independence.