Reviewed by Amanda on
Seriously. 200 pages before she works up the nerve to ask, even though she has no problem asking about tattoo meanings or customs or ordering people around. Instead, she takes the word of her half-brother who, if she bothered to OPEN HER EYES AND SEE BECAUSE IT'S SO OBVIOUS IT HURTS, is a horrid excuse for a family member and ruler.
Despite that (and the weird names), I kinda liked Warprize. It's fantasy and romance with historical elements and I am intrigued by the world. It was probably the first book I've ever stumbled over first person narrative, though, as I kept expecting to see "she" and "her" and each "I" and "my" was jolting and I had to remind myself that no, Amanda, you're not reading a third person book.
Though now I'm reading the blurb for the second book in this series and it's the same couple and while I liked them, I'm not sure I want more of the same. Gimme the happiness of other couples, dammit. Is it too much to ask that one couple's journey is solved in one book instead of four? Correction. Lara and Keir get three books and there's a new couple in book four. Is it just me, or does that seem unfair?
I will say that I liked the romance progression between Lara and Keir. Lara clearly has no idea about what's going on or how Keir feels, but he never forces her into anything. Instead, he draws her in by taking care of her and letting her practice her healing. Good stuff.
In sum, great "I need an escape from life" book, but not a series I'm intending to continue. It pays to ask the right questions, yo. Also to have descriptive love scenes. How does everything fit together? I DON'T KNOW. (Well, I know, but I had to guess for this.)
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 19 March, 2014: Finished reading
- 19 March, 2014: Reviewed