Oathbound by Victoria McCombs

Oathbound (The Royal Rose Chronicles, #1)

by Victoria McCombs

Beware the waters. The dangerous deep brings ruin to all.

Emme has spent her life avoiding anything to do with pirates. But the fates are cruel, and now a hidden sickness leads her to partner with pirates for the one thing that can save her—a cure on an island none are certain exists.

The pirate captain’s secrets are darker than the deep and threaten to kill them all. His obligations are tinged with betrayal, for his oathbind must be fulfilled. To ignore it is to invite peril of unimaginable destruction.

As the adventure unfolds, the sea takes more than she expects and the sea gives more than he wants.

Reviewed by ladygrey on

3 of 5 stars

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I was excited to read Oathbound. The cover is pretty. The premise is intriguing. And it's hard to find clean fantasy. I started reading the first few chapters, then put it down. …And didn't pick it up again for a few weeks. While the beginning tried to elicit intrigue, mystery and suspense it was ineffective because I didn't care about the characters. When I came back to the story I remembered that Emme had revealed she was dying and thought, “eh. I don't really care.”

I didn't care much about Arn, whether or not he was captain of his ship or if he paid back his debt.

I didn't care much whether Emric ever got a ship of his own to captain. Or if anything at all happened to Ontario or the rest of the crew. When half of them died on the island I didn't care. The characters were fairly flat and yet I kept reading. Because it wasn't so bad that I wanted to DNF it. I was mildly curious whether the characters would achieve any of their goals in as much as understanding how it would lead into the second book.

I did not like that Arn lost his hand. That seemed too dramatic a consequence and also not well told. I read “sliced cleanly through” as he gets a deep cut to his wrist, not it gets cut off. So when he's lamenting that he only has one hand I was confused. I finally accepted he's apparently lost a hand and it made me like the story less.

I was fairly certain I had no interest in the second book. Even after Emric “died” I knew Emric wasn't dead. The introduction of a mermaid girlfriend just before made that pretty obvious. I didn't see the reveal about his mother, but also didn't feel anything or really care much at all about that moment. I had been somewhat curious what was so terrible about the king because whatever it was, Arn didn't just desert the navy but kill all his shipmates (which seemed like a really drastic move). Ontario's reveal, though, was maybe the most interesting bit at the end. I didn't see that coming. It definitely made me like him less. In fact, it felt more like a betrayal than anything Landon did (I mean I didn't like Landon at all but nothing he did felt terrible).

So now I probably will read the second book eventually. In part because I know McCombs style is florid in its description and superficial with its characters, so I won't be disappointed. And in part because it will look pretty in an instagram post and it feels like cheating to post about a book I haven't read.

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Reading updates

  • 28 January, 2024: Started reading
  • 28 January, 2024: on page 0 out of 304 0%
  • 18 February, 2024: Finished reading
  • 18 February, 2024: Reviewed