After reading, I stand by my earlier statement that it appears the publisher and/or author is milking the series for revenue because neither this book nor the primary protagonists in it was in any way, shape, or form essential to the overarching plot. Said overarching plot moved forward very marginally, if at all. If it was necessary to publish a story about Gaius, this could very well have been a novella.
The entire premise of this book was that Kachka (by virtue of being a "fierce warrior" with no magicks whatsoever, along with Gaius (who came along; why, I do not know) and their team, have to retrieve the evil god Chramnesind's eye before his zealot followers can get their hands on it. Why is this so important to the looming war? We do not know, except that according to Rhiannon, "there is power in the talismans left by the gods." Dassit.
I also reiterate my point that Gaius and Kachka are not even *marginally* integral to this series. This entire book could've been written as Brannie and Aidan's quest/love story and would've probably made more sense because at least, Brannie and Aidan are part of the core cast, even if tangentially. In fact, it could've been Morfyd and Brastias' quest and would have made more sense.
And because Gaius and Kachka aren't integral or even really interesting (Gaius is a nice guy, that's all. Not interesting or integral), there was in fact, precious little about them and their hollow little 'love story', thank the gods. Far more time was devoted to the rest of the cast - Annwyl (whom I love), everybody and their mama at Garbhan isle, the twins (yayy), and Rhi (who's becoming less annoying). That was the saving grace of this book.
I have previously stated somewhere how the punchline shtick with Kachka and her sister and the "Daughters of the Steppes" is actually not funny at all and overplayed. It became downright offensive in this installment. There was a scene where the huge giant-like Zoya Kolesova, daughter of the Steppe, comes to the south lands and basically forces a soldier to dance with her who is obviously very unwilling and intimidated by her size. And later she ends up sleeping with him (or some other such unwilling soldier). That was played on for humor, I believe. But I didn't find it very funny. That is *sexual harassment* and *rape.* not funny and not a punchline. That REALLY bothered me.
Also. Vateria. Sigh. If we are going to make a filler book about a filler character, could we at least get him to fulfill his most greatest wish? The only reason Gaius didn't/couldn't kill Vateria his nemesis was because she had a small son, and we are good guys so we can't kill children and so let their mama escape for another day. Talk about Deus ex Machina.
But for Annwyl and the original crew, this book would've been a fail. It is not far from it as it is. I would borrow this from the library, not buy it.
I will still read the next book series because I am invested in the original characters, but I will wait to get it from my library. I bet the next book will be Brannie and Aidan's story. If it is I am here for it.
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I like Gaius. He seems level-headed (like Bran), and in this world of crazy characters, level-headed is good and refreshing.
I don't like Kachka. The slapstick with she and her sister is over-the-top and frankly, not at all funny. It's too much.
And I feel like Ms. Aiken and her publishers are milking this series for money by stretching it out. I do not know how essential Gaius and Kachka/their story is to the plot.
So I am hoping there will be more to this book than the love story between the two.