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In the second book in The Hundredth Queen Series, Emily R. King once again follows a young warrior queen’s rise to meet her destiny in a richly imagined world of sorcery and forbidden powers.
Though the tyrant rajah she was forced to marry is dead, Kalinda’s troubles are far from over. A warlord has invaded the imperial city, and now she’s in exile. But she isn’t alone. Kalinda has the allegiance of Captain Deven Naik, her guard and beloved, imprisoned for treason and stripped of command. With the empire at war, their best hope is to find Prince Ashwin, the rajah’s son, who has promised Deven’s freedom on one condition: that Kalinda will fight and defeat three formidable opponents.
But as Kalinda’s tournament strengths are once again challenged, so too is her relationship with Deven. While Deven fears her powers, Ashwin reveres them—as well as the courageous woman who wields them. Kalinda comes to regard Ashwin as the only man who can repair a warring world and finds herself torn between her allegiance to Deven and a newly found respect for the young prince.
With both the responsibility to protect her people and the fate of those she loves weighing heavily upon her, Kalinda is forced again to compete. She must test the limits of her fire powers and her hard-won wisdom. But will that be enough to unite the empire without sacrificing all she holds dear?
287 pages, Kindle Edition
First published September 26, 2017

“You have nothing to fear. You are fire and fire is you.”
”You can start the fire, but you cannot control it. Anu created mortals in the image of the gods. Sky in our lungs, land beneath our feet, fire in our soul, and water in our blood. The First Bhutas were each given dominion over one of these powers. So you see, you have nothing to fear. You are fire, and fire is you.”
“Kali loves our people, and blames herself for their recent suffering. She will compete in another tournament to protect them from a foreign queen and more hardship.”
“Anu sought to possess his father’s glory and become king of the gods, so he killed Abzu and usurped his lordship. Enraged by her son’s betrayal, Tiamat birthed the First-Ever Dragon and filled the creature’s body with fiery venom. Together, they made war against her son. Armed with the arrows of his winds, Anu, the god of storms, fought Tiamat and the dragon. Anu cut through the channels of Tiamat’s blood and made the north wind bear her body away into secret places, creating rivers that ran into the salty seas. From her ribs, Anu crafted the vault of the sky and land, and from her spine, she sprouted the Morass.”
“What happened to the First-Ever Dragon?”
“Doesn’t say, but I once read that another name for the demon Kur is the First-Ever Dragon.”
Demons and dragons are one and the same?
If she can fall this far, I can too.
Having my title taken is like tumbling down endless stairs. I am falling for an eternity, with no means of stopping.
You can turn to the Voider.
The errant thought sprouts from nowhere. I try to pluck out the terrible idea, but it grows roots.
The Voider can answer your heart’s wish. It can set Deven and our people free from the encampments.
”Not every son is destined to become his father.”
”I’m ashamed of Tarek, ashamed of how the rest of the world perceives the empire and me on account of him.
”Undoing their prejudice will take time. Have patience and faith.”