I would like to preface this review by stating that I read
this entire book in one day. It was it was raining, it was the long weekend, and it
was just that good!
In the beginning, there was the
Namsara: the child of the sky and spirit, who carried love and laughter
wherever he went. But where there is light, there must be darkness-and so there
was also the Iskari. The child of blood and moonlight. The destroyer. The death
bringer.
Asha, the daughter of the Dragon King, is that
destroyer. And what a fearsome destroyer
she is! Her grandmother enslaved a whole population of foreigners, made enemies
of the dragons, and banned the old stories. Asha follows in that legacy. She goes out into
the Rift with her trusty ax and takes down dragon after dragon. She is ferocious,
fearless, and just plain fierce.
Feared and reviled by all in the kingdom, it is illegal to touch
her or even meet her gaze. As a child, she did the forbidden; she told the
ancient stories outlawed by the king. For breaking this rule, the First Dragon,
Kozu, set fire to her entire town, killing hundreds, destroying homes, and
disfiguring the entire side of her face and chest. To atone for her sin, she
became a killing machine, destroying as many dragons as she can find. Her other act of
atonement will be to marry the cruel commandant on her eighteenth birthday. Jarek is a cruel, drunken, brute of
a man that Asha will do anything to be rid of.
When Asha’s father offers her a chance to gain her freedom
in exchange for the head of the First Dragon Kozu, she eagerly takes up the
challenge. What should be an easy task
becomes much more complicated when her brother Dax asks her to save one of
Jarek’s slaves from a deadly lashing. Rescuing Torwin requires Asha to help him
escape and an unlikely alliance is formed. With his help, her quest to kill
Kozu seems to get more and more complicated. Truths start to be revealed that cannot be
denied. Are dragons really the bringers of destruction she has been lead to
believe, or has someone been lying?
Realistic characters, ancient stories, and Dragons make for
an awesome debut novel by Kristen Ciccarelli. If you like great fantasy novels,
with realistic, flawed, but tough as nails heroines, this book is for you. Similar
reads I`ve tried out recently are Seraphina by Rachel Hartman or the Throne of Glass series by Sarah J. Maas.
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