I truly enjoyed this dark, atmospheric fantasy novel. Told through the eyes of the strong heroine, Maleta, and her Life-Mate, Cianan, this book took me on an adventure full of hope, grit, courage, self-doubt, self-determination, and love.
Hedda, the Grey Goddess, is a tough taskmaster. It is to be expected. She’s a goddess, after all. Her purpose is to ensure the balance between good and evil in her realm, the land of Shamar. Humans are her tools for maintaining this balance--one, in particular, Hedda’s Sword is feared by all. At the moment, Maleta is Hedda’s Sword, and the scales are tipped decidedly toward evil in her land.
Maleta is more than competent in this role. Her skills as a swordswoman are impressive. What she may lack in size against some of her larger opponents, she makes up for in intelligence and willpower. However, she is a tall, physically fit woman and lethal. When she discovers that the evil in her land stems from the queen, she realizes she must depose her to save her people and restore balance. Her past and what she has endured, and the fact she survived it, make her perfect for this task.
Cianan is from another land and worships the goddess of the light. In fact, he is her champion sent on a quest to save a master of sword fighting who has already captured his heart. While he is close to perfection, thankfully, he’s not perfect. Handsome, intelligent, compassionate, and strong, he is a true force of light.
Ms. Wildes has a way of writing that immersed me in the world. It felt real and vital. I loved the characters I was meant to love and cheered for justice against the characters who deserved it. I wanted Maleta to evolve enough to let Cianan in and to fall in love with him. Her reasons for taking so long were completely plausible to me. When they finally came together, I wanted to jump up and down and shout, “Bravo!”
The one thing that stopped this from being a 5-star book was I felt like we hit the climax with the conclusion of the battle against Sunniva. When the story continued far past that, I had to change my mindset. Although I knew logically that more needed to be done to conclude the story--and I think the true climax was what happened when she took back her family fortress--for me, so much focus had been on beating Sunniva that, when she did, I felt like the story was concluded. It wasn’t. There was a more than satisfactory ending, but that was just how I felt.
That being said, I will happily pick up book one and devour it just as I did this one. At which point, I will follow suit with the rest in the series. Luckily for me, there are six more.
Thank you, Ms. Wildes for taking me on this multi-faceted journey through this fascinating world you’ve created.