Whole series was entertaining, even with typos, BUT it doesn't really go anywhere
The main issue I have with DK's books is that they feel like the book form of serialized TV. I.e., book after book which, while internally interesting and entertaining, aren't really going anywhere. Like this particular series: the last book, which you'd expect to be the conclusion of some major arc, doesn't really wrap anything up. It more or less just ends and attempts to send you forward to yet another series featuring The same character. Having another series featuring The same characters wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing IF the series had had a strong primary arc which was satisfactorily explored and resolved, with minor threads connecting this series to the next one. But that isn't the case here. Conflicts seem somewhat contrived to just motivate another book without having a meaningful reason to exist. I mean, yes, all the conflicts are obviously intended to develop the main character (and they do), but they don't organically spring from a feeling of a rich world populated by characters with opposed goals. Well, okay, some of them did, at first, but then there were the paper cutout villains (the Blood Priests), and then the Hjan started losing their sense of complexity too. In short the first few books felt like they were going somewhere BIGGER with a meaningful theme and outcome, but then it just petered out and I found myself skimming a lot since it constantly started rehashing what had previously occurred in the series. I won't continue to follow these characters in this world in the next series because (at this point) I have lost confidence that the narrative is going anywhere. Like serialized TV it feels like it'll go on and on and on until people stop reading and it gets "cancelled."
Following along (which is what this feels like) with a character's life gets tiresome if it feels like it's a contrived journey with lots of rehashing of previous events and musings. At some point it just becomes boring. Like this series really should have had her set up her network and use it to resolve some important problem in the world. Don't drag it out just to fill more books with words. Respect your readers time and attention.
This is the second series I've read by DK, and they both suffer from the same issues. I doubt I'll read more of the author's work because I don't want to continue to feel strung along... Like maaaybe some day, some book, some series there might eventually be a good conclusion to things...or maybe it'll just eventually end without any resolution at all.
It's clear to me that the author has the skill to create entertaining stories which conclude meaningfully, but just chooses to stretch them out into more books and series' then necessary... massively diluting the impact of the overall narrative. It's not a good business decision if it costs you long-term readers. Anyway, enough of my soap box.