From bestselling author and TikTok sensation A.K. Mulford comes the fourth book in the Five Crowns of Okrith fantasy series, following a bookish heir's fight to save their mother and kingdom when an unexpected romance blossoms. The crown is calling their name, yet can their head bear the weight when passion sets hearts racing? Perfect for fans of Sarah J. Maas, Sue Lynn Tan, and Jennifer L Armentrout.
A court of revelry. A bookish heir. An impending marriage. And a dark new power rising in the world...
If allowed, Neelo Emberspear would never leave the library. Reluctant to take the throne despite their mother's faltering health, the neurodivergent bookworm craves escape from their arranged marriage to charming fae warrior Talhan Catullus. But they know their duty can be put off no longer when their mother, the drug-addled queen, disastrously lights the castle on fire.
Fighting to save their mother's life and keep her on the throne, Neelo is astonished when bonding over the written word brings them closer than ever to their cavalier, soon-to-be husband. But the non-binary heir's growing affections may be cut short with witch uprisings threatening to topple the entire continent.
Can Neelo claim both love and dominion before their court is reduced to ash?
A. K. Mulford is a bestselling fantasy author and former wildlife biologist who swapped rehabilitating monkeys for writing novels. They/she is inspired to create diverse stories that transport readers to new realms, making them fall in love with fantasy for the first time or all over again. They now live in Australia with their husband and two young human primates, creating lovable fantasy characters and making ridiculous TikToks (@akmulfordauthor).
My current rating is due to the inclusivity. A non-binary main character is an incredible step, and I love to see it. But pretty much everything else fell a little flat.
Starting with Neelo, I loved the inclusion of this character from meeting Neelo in the first book; and was so excited to read a book about them. And I was more surprised it was in their perspective and not Talhan's, as I expected, since the prior book was Bri's perspective. I felt Neelo's character was built well, and I loved the bookworm/neurodivergent/introvert of them. Neelo's personality was also fun in prior books, so I was excited to have a whole book to delve deeper. And while I did enjoy a lot about Neelo, the whole woe is me, I'm not worthy got old, real quick. The character turned into a 14yo tween mentality real quick. Neelo is praised for being so observant but missed clues right in front of their face. Also, all the talk of baggy clothes and Neelo not being comfortable in their body was so weird and felt incessant. I'm a curvy female who had her formative years during the "Victoria Secret Model is How Every Woman Should Look" Era. I KNOW what if feels like to be uncomfortable in your body. I am still not comfortable in my body. I went through multiple years in middle school wearing baggy clothes because I was so oddly shaped and didn't know how to wear flattering clothes. I promise you I didn't, and don't, think about my body, or my baggy clothes, as much as Neelo did. I felt like having a non-binary character was such a big opportunity, and Neelo turned into a whiny brat with mommy issues rather than the introverted, intelligent character I expected them to be.
The romance: it really tried to be a slow burn, and I appreciated that, but it just wasn't there for me. Neelo's attitude and disrespect for Talhan was too much and not well done. It turned me off to Neelo, honestly. And was also extremely childish of Neelo. I get Neelo is an introvert and socially awkward, but this behavior was extreme, especially from someone who grew up in a court and observing people interacting at court their whole life. It's just not believable. And Talhan just willingly taking it? Just no. When Neelo finally stopped whining and gave in to their feelings for Talhan, the romance moved so quickly. I guess it kind of gets a pass since they were friends their whole lives, but the reader is only told, never shown, so it just felt so quick, especially since most of the book leading up to that Neelo was ignoring Talhan so they barely had any bonding scenes. I just felt this could have been done so much better and was really disappointed.
The plot: I really enjoyed the continuation of the plot that was set up in the prior books, though I wish it had a bit more prominence. It was mentioned and somewhat underlying the beginning through the middle of the book, but really didn't come into play until the end. Then everything was happening, and all the action was over in basically a page. (Not really, but maybe 3.) The big bad is only bad for 2 seconds, and it makes it boring, and once again, I just expected more.
Overall, I really expected more from every aspect. I think Neelo's constant whining about not being worthy and the many, many strange and seemingly constant thoughts about their body and baggy clothes could have been cut/cut down, and other aspects, like the plot, the relationship between Neelo and Talhan, and Talhans character, all could have been built up and expanded more. This book really read YA, and not in a good way.
I will say I loved the inclusion of Indigo and that Neelo actually thought about the cat and what was best for the cat. It's really rare for cats, or any animal, to be so well included and not just an after thought. The amount of times I've read a book and a pet is mentioned and then never mentioned again is insane.
I was lucky to receive an ARC of the evergreen heir. I have loved this entire series and have been waiting impatiently for Neelo’s story to be released.
This is the first time I have read a book from the perspective of a person whose pronouns are they/them. I am so grateful that this is becoming more widely accepted in media. This book is so special to me for that reason.
Neelo is a nonbinary, neurodivergent bookworm. As a queer autistic person myself I related so strongly to Neelo’s character and felt overwhelmingly represented in a way I never have before in any book.
That being said, this is not a book about struggling with gender identity or being neurodivergent. It is a book about an introvert who struggles to express their feelings and desires, who meets the perfect person to bring them out of their shell and embrace life. This is really important to me because being nonbinary or autistic is part of life for many people, and there should be stories told about us that don’t centre around those facts but are secondary to the main plot.
Just like the other books in the series, The Evergreen Heir has amazing world building and a fascinating magic system. It is full of my favourite tropes, like found family and forced proximity. It has just the right amount of spice to be really hot but not detract from the plot.
The plot twists at the end had me gasping out loud. I couldn’t put this down. I can’t wait for the next one!
This book is nothing like I've read before. It's not even like any of the other books in the series. I loved it. It kept me engaged, just to learn more about this character. Neelo is unlike any character I've read about before.
I can't wait for Mulford to release the next in this series. This is definitely on the top of my list for favorite New Adult fantasy series.
Thank you to Harper Voyager and AK Mulford for providing me with an arc to read and review.
This is book 4 in the Five Crowns of Okrith series and it follows Neelo, a nonbinary heir to the Southern Court and Talhan, the Golden Eagle and betrothed to Neelo. I absolutely love this series and have loved it since book 1 but I think this was my favorite so far. I adored how well Neelo’s gender was handled and talked about as something that is just a fact about them and isn’t the only part of them. I also really loved how neurodiverse this book was for both Neelo and Talhan as we can assume Talhan has dyslexia and Neelo is on the autism spectrum and has ADHD.
Neelo is trying to save their court and their mother from ruin but when they have to deal with their Betrothed Talhan that they don’t really want to be there. They end up going on crazy adventures together in hopes they can protect their kingdom and maybe end up falling in love together.
One of my favorite parts of this book was how the spice was handled due to Neelo being nonbinary. The scenes describe enough that you do learn what their sex assigned at birth was but also the scenes are done in a way that felt very gender neutral. Neelo and Talhan also explored different acts that seemed to help Neelo feel confident in themselves during the spicy moments.
This book touches on how you can love family but be unable to protect them from hardship. Neelo and their mother’s relationship is a big focus of the book and you see how Neelo wants so badly to save their mother from herself but their mother refuses to listen to them. Neelo is very impacted by this relationship so the change we see in them from the beginning to the end after they finally feel comfortable in their own body and personality.
I highly recommend this series if you love Sarah J Maas’s vibes but want more diversity as this series has everything from plus sized rep to neurodiverse characters to BIPOC characters to LGBTQ+ characters. Book one is the High Mountain Court which for me gave me the same vibes as ACOTAR but not super similar.
Okay, so, we'll see if another book appears in this series, but my takeaway at the end of this one, based on the peddling sample of some NEW series Mulford has apparently started on, points in the direction of 'no'.
As much as I loathe an unfinished story, I've reached my absolute max on trying to wade through Mulford's apparently greater fascination with seeing how many types of sexual relationships SHE can "try out" on HER readers. (Annoying isn't it? You know, being made to stop and pay SPECIAL attention to a portion of a sentence that, in fact, has absolutely NOTHING to do with what SHOULD be the actual plot?)
Yeah, so, I should have said, if you didn't read my review on Book 3, you may be more surprised by my vehemently hating this book. I knew this was going to be bad, but Jesus Christ, I truly thought Mulford might at least do a better job tying off loose ends, rambling and God help me...EDITING, but NO. NOOOOO, NO, NO. THIS WAS WORSE.
This was the sloppiest damned book I've bothered to finish in a VERY long time, and as if I weren't annoyed enough with Neelos pronouns being SO distracting and causing massive confusion in dialogue (which I admittedly expected after realizing this book was centric to this character), but the fact that this has some of the absolute sloppiest proofing and editing I've seen in publication, let alone in a FOURTH book in a series, just honestly makes me wish I could get my money back.
I mean, if she couldn't bother with a coherent story that manages to not force you to suspend your memory of previous books, maintained continuity, or, oh, maybe actually DEALT WITH A HUGE CLIFFHANGER when absolutely nothing else indicated a 5th book. Now add shoddy editing AND having to suffer someone "experimenting" with pronouns so poorly that I was 2/3 through this far-too-long-to-be-incomplete exercise in pure fury before I finally stopped being drug to a halt at least once a page to try to discern who the actual hell was SPEAKING. The last 1/3 or so was made easier by only having to stop about once every 4th page by then. That's still not a compliment.
I tried to stay with this series in the hopes the writing would get better, and that I would eventually get to what the hell is happening with the whole Violet Witch agenda, but I'm done. She STILL didn't deliver that ending in this book, and she's got about a whole 1% chance of convincing me to suffer her shit writing, editing and general storytelling a 5th time with this track record. I can't summon the will to care when there are SOOOO many other, better books out there (and some of which I threw down for FAR fewer offenses than this utter slop of a book).
A love story and a mystery all rolled up into one. I appericate the diversity in this series. I didn't see the twist coming, but the love story was patient, kind and consistent. When I think of a fated mate story line, this is what I want - childhood friendship to grow into an adult choice, where they choose each other. It was slow and deliberate. This was my first book where the MC is gender neutral, the writing took me a while to get used to, mostly because the use of written language when telling a story with a full cast, there is a lot of plurals. I can't wait to jump into the next book, also sad it's the final book.
This series ranks up there as one of my favourite fantasy series of all time.
What a beautiful piece of literature. The representation in this series is next to none; and this novel in particular was incredible.
Though this is book four in a five part series, the overarching storyline almost takes a backseat to the inspirational story of growth and self discovery our MC takes. If you’ve read the others in this series, you know Neelo Emberspeer identifies as a Non-binary character with they/them pronouns.
Throughout the story, A.K Mulford treats this as a non-event in the best way. Any and all insecurities about this are within the MC, but widely they are accepted. The descriptions of their body, particularly during spicy scenes are treated very respectfully. With descriptions you can deduce biologically which parts Neelo has however, realistically (to the best of my understanding as a CISFemale), the methods of intimacy change scene to scene based on how Neelo is feeling in that moment - how they wish to feel in that moment.
Talhan is the ultimate partner for Neelo - the sun to their night, and the build up of their relationship feels genuine and the pay off feels earnt.
The set up for the final book is insane - every book feels like it solves one mystery only to leave me with two more! I can’t wait for the conclusion to this series!!!
Tropes include: - non binary MC - grumpy x sunshine - friends to lovers - forced proximity - arranged marriage - bookloving MC
Thank you AK Mulford & Harper Voyager for the opportunity to read this story early, and provide an honest review.
I loved the first two books in this series but unfortunately this fourth addition to the series let me down.
Quick Synopsis: Neelo is the future ruler of the Southern Court and her mother recently betrothed her to the infamous soldier called The Golden Eagle, Talhan. Now, however, Neelo has to find the source of a drug that is running rife through her court, and through her mother, while also navigating the start of a new relationship they’re unsure could actually ever work. d
Trigger warnings: Drug abuse; drug trafficking; abuse of power; possession
What I liked: -I loved that we have a non-binary character -I really liked Neelo as a character -Getting a grumpy/sunshine trope in a fantasy was really fun
What I struggled with: -The organization and structure of the writing was the aspect I didn’t love. The writing seemed all over the place and the syntax made it hard for me to follow sometimes. -Some scenes that were long could’ve been shorter and some that were short, should’ve been longer -While Neelo was a well developed character, I wanted more depth from Talhan. -The plot was unorganized. I couldn’t follow the structure of the plot although I did like it. -Neelo is supposed to be this incredible strategist but I’ll be honest, they seemed to miss a lot of the key things and didn’t really anticipate much.
I believe these are marketed as being interconnected standalones but there is absolutely no way you can read these independent of the other books. You definitely have to read each book in order to understand anything going on.
Hellllooooooo representation! I have NEVER read a book with a non-binary main character and this was HOT! Neelo easily stole the title of favorite character from Bri and now I’m dying to read the next book!
CW: violence, drug use/addiction, spice, some others.
Thank you to Harper Collins/Harper Voyager for my copy of the book!
This one is far and away my favorite of the four Okrith books I’ve read so far. How can you not love the black cat/golden retriever dynamic?
After an impromptu brawl for the hand of the Heir of Saxbridge, all eyes turn to the Southern kingdom. Neelo Emberspear wants nothing more than to hide away in their library, content to let the bawdy ways of the south pass them by. Unfortunately, Neelo’s mother keeps trying to pass her crown off to them, and it’s really getting in the way of Neelo’s best attempts at staying in the shadows. With the additional threat posed by Augustus Norwood, it looks like Neelo’s going to be more in the spotlight than they ever desired.
Neelo “please do not perceive me” Emberspear is probably my favorite of all of the characters we’ve seen in the “Five Crowns of Okrith” series, and this book just solidified that standing. With Talhan being our other MC, I had no doubt this book was going to be really good. Fortunately, I was correct, and the story was incredibly entertaining.
One of the things I’ve enjoyed the most about this series is that you can see both the writing and the world building developing as the books continue. While each can be read as a standalone, I’ve been reading them in chronological order, which has made the progress even more noticeable. One of my biggest issues with book 1, and to a certain extent book 2, was that the writing was stilted and awkward; there were very few compound sentences, and the overall structure made it very difficult to stay engaged with the story. Book 3 made a lot of progress in this department, and this book, book 4, absolutely knocked it out of the park. I stayed engaged with the plot the whole way through and rarely saw any pieces that didn’t seem to flow.
With the entirety of the story taking place in the Southern kingdom, we also got to see even more of Okrith and the world building that I love so much. We saw a bit of it in Remy’s story (book 1), but mostly in passing as she was on her own journey. The Southern kingdom is vibrant and colorful, and we got to see it from Neelo’s lense as the heir who feels removed from their kingdom, which provides a nice contrast to what could otherwise be an overwhelming location.
The plot was lovely, and I stayed entertained the entire way through. It didn’t really feel like the story hit any slow parts, and I think a lot of this has to do with how enjoyable the Neelo/Talhan dynamic is to watch. It’s a very sweet, very subtle connection that’s full of acceptance and heart. That’s not to say there isn’t action, of course, because someone is still trying to ruin the entirety of Okrith, which is mildly problematic, but having those longer gaps between action didn’t feel like it disrupted the story.
All in all, I stand by my statement that this has been my favorite installment thus far. Each book has continued to improve, and I’m very excited to see what’s in store for book 5. If you like stories about the fae, witches, and realm-altering trouble, then this might be a series you want to check out! Each story can be read as an interconnected standalone, though I would personally suggest starting with book 1 so you can have a full grasp on what’s going on throughout.
I’d forgotten how much I love this series and this one was amazing!! Such a beautiful love story with a gripping adventure! Neelo’s journey was so incredible, to watch them grow, love and lead- it was absolutely amazing!!
This is the second queer fae fantasy book in this series and I’m in love with the way AK Mulford wrote it! I’ve never read a story with a non binary main character! Cant wait to see how this series ends!
“The truth of who I am cannot be divined from something as simple as my physical form. I am the same person both dressed and undressed. I am confident in exactly who that person is . . . But I just don’t want anyone else to mistake me for something I’m not because of it.” -Favorite quote from The Evergreen Heir
I received an advanced copy of this book for review purposes.
I’ve read both the previous books in the five crowns of okrith series, although I specifically avoided re-reading them before reading The Evergreen Heir. Some of the political machinations were things I forgot, but I was able to catch up pretty quickly so I think there was a good balance between re-capping what has happened in the past without going into so much detail as to feel repetitive.
Neelo was one of my favorite characters in the other books, but they fell a little bit flat for me in this book, and I think that’s pretty much only because of how they resisted their betrothal with Talhan. I don’t want to provide spoilers, but all the other aspects of the character that I loved were still there, but then there was also all this negative self talk and complete avoidance of actually having a simple conversation with Talhan, who was also their lifelong friend. It just seemed like a manufactured problem to me, for the sake of their being something to keep them apart. I would’ve expected someone as smart and logical as Neelo to handle it differently is all. & btw, Talhan is an absolute treasure. I love him so much and he actually deserved more from Neelo even though he NEVER got as selfish as I would have, he stayed patient and resolute the whole time, it was the flip side of Neelo constantly pulling away.
The violet witch based plot was really well done, and while Queen Emberspear was infuriating I loved how Neelo eventually stood up to her & stepped into their own. I’m guessing we may be going to the eastern court for the next book? I can’t wait!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
5⭐️ The Evergreen Heir is the fourth book in this amazing fantasy series full of the most endearing characters, mystery filled adventures and heart warming romance.
This instalment of our story is set in the Southern Court, with a Queen desperate to pass her throne down to her child so she can enjoy partying with her people. Such a surprising setting when all the courts of Okrith are facing such dangerous times with an evil witch and a dangerous Fae seeking to rule the world.
Having already been introduced to the character of Neelo in the previous books I was very excited to take this journey with them. But I was not ready for how deeply connected I would be to this character. It is a rare treat to find a Non-binary, Neurodivergent bookworm as the main character in a fantasy book. Especially one who finds their people and lives a life on their own terms while still thriving in such a complex world of the royal court without leadership and the looming threat, which has already impacted their neighbouring courts, coming their way.
Neelo ‘accidentally’ becomes betrothed to Talhan, one part of the famous Eagle twins who has always been a kind and loyal friend to them. As an introvert with no interest in relationships, Neelo seeks to push Talhan away at every opportunity.
The intrigue and suspense of the journey so far continues in this book but it is the relationship between Neelo and Talhan and how this supports Neelo’s discovery of self which takes centre stage, and I was completely invested!
AK Mulford expertly gave us the tropes of grumpy-sunshine, push them away, reluctant royal, found family and fated mates, while writing such realistic neuro-affirming, gender diverse and queer characters. An inclusive and all embracing fantasy world.
I highly recommend The Evergreen Heir, the character of Neelo and their relationship with Talhan is everything but even without this shining light, this book keeps the story flowing beautifully.
This is the 4th out of 5 books. Every single book has the same template and exactly the same ending for every couple. So so so boring.
Nothing was happening the whole book, very tough to read. Didn’t like the main character (I liked them in the previous books as a side character) 😭
There was barely any action, no surprises and no drama. I was reading it just because I want to finish the series. This felt like a book where the author tried to set up a big resolution and action for the next book so you had to push through this one.
And you already got to know that the next book has also fated couple, so I hope it won’t get another of the same boring happy ending 🥲
3.5 stars ✨ This book has great inclusion, it’s got a wonderful mystery vibe to it, i really liked the general vibe of this book, it fell flat for me because i felt like the main love interest had very little depth, i was so keen to see more of Talhan, i also felt like the grump x sunshine trope was TOO forced and didn’t integrate well but still a great little read! I’d absolutely reccomend this to anyone who’s looking for an inclusive fantasy, esp for those non-binary folk looking for some main character representation!
I thoroughly loved reading, The Evergreen Heir, by AK Mulford! The Five Crowns of Okrith series follows a group of friends and royals as they combat evil, find themselves, and find love.
The Evergreen Heir, follows Neelo (they/them) and Talhan’s (he/him) journey in the Southern Court. Neelo is the Heir of Saxbridge and is trying to save their mother, the Queen from her addiction to brew. Neelo feels unworthy and incapable of taking over the crown and, The Evergreen Heir, follows their journey as they make tough decisions to protect themselves and the people of Saxbridge from Baba Monroe.
The violet witches have returned with one focus, the smallest seed becoming royalty. The violet witches will stop at nothing to destroy Saxbridge and Okrith from the inside out and Baba Monroe is the immortal witch that Okrith didn’t know existed.
Talhan and Neelo have been friends since childhood but now Talhan wants more and he isn’t leaving the South. Neelo is used to being alone with their books, cat, and friendly, yet over-bearing witch, Rish. The Evergreen Heir has an ENBY, neurodivergent MC that loves books and dislikes attention. It is the perfect story to understand some of the daily struggles of mis-gendering that nonbinary individuals go through. As Neelo grows and adapts to life with Talhan, we see them believe in themselves, their bravery, their kindness, and their ability to love themselves in a way that honors the fullness of who they are.
It’s a beautiful work of art and I am grateful to Netgalley, Harper Voyager, and of course AK for the ability to receive this ARC and leave an honest review. I can’t wait for book 5!
Nonbinary MC Neurodivergent MC Fated Mates Friends to Lovers Magic System Interconnected series Slow burn
THE EVERGREEN HEIR continues the series theme of choice and self-determination. Neelo Emberspear, heir to the Southern Court, is more comfortable in the quiet company of their library rather than the revelries and indulgences their kingdom is known for.
Their mother, the Queen, hatched a marriage scheme that betrothed them to their childhood friend, the fae warrior Talhan Catullus. Neelo though refuses the match and is determined to convince Talhan that he must not anchor himself to them or their court. But doth the heir protest too much?
Neelo & Talhan grow in affection and attraction as they adventure to discover a threat that could destroy the Southern Court from the inside. The relationship is the sweetest of the series yet. Patient and passionate, as it develops from the earliest of trusts and companionship. Neelo is non binary, ace/demi. Tal is cis, flirty, and wholly Neelo-sexual. The devotion makes my heart race just as much as the physical chemistry.
I'm more critical of the action/adventure of this book than the others. It felt episodic with a resolution left more for the next book. But the draw was undoubtedly Neelo stepping into a main character role. They were a very relatable character to follow.
The Evergreen Heir ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ I was so excited to finally dive into Neelo’s story. I have been a bibliophile since birth and truly resonate with Neelo’s need to always have a book and I envy their network of hidden books across the kingdom. I have thoroughly enjoyed all of the 5 crowns okirth books so far, how ever the evergreen heir was not my favorite of the series. The plot dragged for the first half of the book for me and Neelo pushing away Tal constantly got very old very quick. Which is why I give it 4 stars. A K Mulford has created a wonderful world with a strong chosen family who each would go above and beyond for each other. I love that Neelo finally figured out that they have been apart of this core group since the beginning. I know a lot of people can relate to feeling like an outsider even in your own “friend group”. It was amazing to see Neelo come into their own and truly embrace their role as the evergreen heir as they fiercely used their vast knowledge and heart to defeat the threat against their kingdom and those they love most. With swoon worthy moments and shocking twists dive in to see how our favorite witches and Fae continue to grow as leaders of their kingdoms and find out can they defeat the greatest threat their world has ever seen?
This is such an amazing story. A bookworm who loves a good mystery, a fae warrior, an entire kingdom that is addicted to parties and substances (with the exception of the bookworm who also is the next in line for the throne). This book is a great continuation of the main storyline, but it's also a great story about self discovery. The main character, Neelo, is non-binary and uses pronounces they/them, which is being used during the entire book. While reading this story, it became clear to me that they are demi sexual and also have ADHD. How? Because their experiences were almost a mirror to my own. It was so great to read a good story with a character that sounds so much like me. Neelo has many insecurities that I recognise, and it was truly healing to read about the acceptance that they get from their chosen family. This story has made me cry on multiple moments because of different reasons. Being happy for someone because of a gift they got given, but also out of sadness, and pride. This is a great read and definitely something I would recommend to my fellow neuro spicy people, because we can learn and recognise a lot out of this story.
This book, while continuing along the main story arc (and dropped some major bombs!) felt secondary to the amazing journey of self discovery, exploration of grief, finding the courage to love and be loved, overcoming and facing childhood trauma and being comfortable in one's own skin was front and centre.
If you've made it this far in the series you know that Neelo is a non binary introverted bookworm. You may have wondered how an author would handle spicy scenes with a character like this. Many other books I've read treat the character as ambivalent. Not AK.
While it's not explicitly stated, you can deduce what Neelo's body parts are and I appreciate so much how the romance and physical interactions were handled as how they changed based on who Neelo felt they were that day.
Talhan is who every person should strive to be, whether male or female. I would have loved to see just a little bit more of his self discovery.. and maybe we'll catch a chapter or two from that book in the finale?
🖤💚📚“I had a lot of things to fight for. Renwick reminded me of that.” Neelo lifted their wet lashes and held Talhan’s molten gaze. “Am I one of them?”“You are all of them,” he whispered, leaning forward and brushing his wet lips to Neelo’s own." . . ARC Review! Thank you, @akmulford for the ARC of this BEAUTIFUL STORY!
I am IN LOVE with this story! A.K. you did it again! Our beloved Neelo and Talhan swept me away with their lobe for each other! This story, of course, is full of adventure, bookloving, witty comment, self-discovery, found family, friends to Lovers, and LGBTQ+ friendly!
Our lovable Non-bionary Booklover, Neelo, is desperate to save their court from an unfortunate addiction to a drug called brew. The court has sunk under the dark Witches influence, and Neelo must find a way to stop it before it consumes and kills them all. While also trying to figure out how to save their mother from this, so they don't have to become Ruler so soon! With drop-dead gorgeous Twin Golden Eagle, Talhan's help through it all, Neelo finds themselves and possibly the love they thought they never deserved! . . Gah! I love this story so much! The Evergreen Heir by A.K. Mulford is out June 13th, 2023! Pre-order on B&N, Amazon, BAM! & wherever books are sold!
I want to say this might be the first time I’ve read a third-person omniscient non-binary character. There were one or two places that I think the grammar just was t working in general, so the sentence felt off, but otherwise this was a good story. I liked that the MC was a bookworm, and tended to push people away. I haven’t read the book before this one in the series, but I don’t think it’s an absolute requirement to read this one. They seem to work as semi standalone books and I’m thinking after this one you’ll need to read in order. The pacing at the beginning was a little slow, but I liked the character development and relationships between all the characters. I do love that all of the original crew are who these books are mostly based around. I’ll for sure recommend this to those that like NA, witches, Fae, adventure, queer and trans representation, fated mates, and the list goes on!
WOW WOW WOWEEE WOW WOW i think this is my favorite of the whole series.
“i had a lot of things to fight for. renwick reminded me of that.” “am I one of them?” “you are all of them.”
CRYING. SCREAMING. i love that so much.
“but when it comes to you- my loyalty to you is eternal and unfailing. i would battle death herself to get to you.”
ARE YOU KIDDING ME I AM IN LOVE WITH THESE CHARACTERS AND THEIR STORIES SO MUCH. i need a love like Neelo and Tal. i’m gonna cry.
this book was so beautiful and intriguing and has my heart. every work this author puts out i immediately need in my hands and on my shelf. they do a remarkable job at including all forms of representation, which is so hard to get sometimes in fantasy. i need the last of this series to come out rn just so I can have them all. will absolutely sell this at my store.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
- Gregarious MMC / bookish MNBC - Queer/POC representation - Slow burn - Neurodivergence representation - Friends to lovers - Chosen family - Fated mates - Fae and witches - Familiar characters we love from past books
“Neelo had always forced themselves to try new things in order to be more like someone else. They’d never considered there’d be new habits, new styles, new routines that made them feel even more like them self.”
If you’re making it this far in the series, you probably know what AKM’s The Five Crowns of Okrith is about.
I love these books. Eager to see how they all wrap up. Also the scene re-enacting the romance novel scenes? 🤌🏻🤌🏻