Tiger Queen by Annie Sullivan

Tiger Queen

by Annie Sullivan

"TIGER QUEEN is a gorgeous, lush YA fiction...Highly recommend for anyone looking for a beautifully crafted stand-alone book." (YA and Kids Book Central)

Two doors.

Two choices.

Life or death.

Kateri, an arrogant warrior princess, has to fight in the arena against her suitors to win her right to rule, and she is desperate to prove to her father that she is strong enough to take over his throne and rule the kingdom. But when she finds out her final opponent, she knows she cannot win. Kateri flees to the desert to train under the enemy she hates the most and the only one who might be able to give her a shot at winning. But what Kateri discovers in the desert twists her world-and her heart-upside down. There in the sand, away from the comforts of the palace, Kateri's perception of her father is challenged and she discovers the truth about his treatment of her people. When she returns to the kingdom, the fate of the one she loves lies behind two doors in the arena-one door leads to happiness, and the other door releases the tiger.

Secrets, suitors, thieves, and a fierce princess await readers in this YA fantasy re-telling.

Tiger Queen:

  • Is a fantasy re-telling of Frank Stockton's famous short story, "The Lady, or the Tiger?"
  • Features a slow-burn romance wrapped in fast-paced adventure
  • Is set in a fantastical world wrought by fascism, classism, and climate crisis

Reviewed by Quirky Cat on

3 of 5 stars

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You guys know that I can't resist a retelling! Tiger Queen, written by Annie Sullivan, retells Frank Stockton's The Lady or the Tiger?

Due to ancient law, Princess Kateri must battle in the arena to take up the mantle and rule like her family before her. As much as Kateri wants to rule, and more than that – protect her people, Kateri knows she cannot win.

So she makes a deal with the devil. It'd be more accurate to say that she's about to make a deal with somebody she never dreamed of working with, but the desert is the only one providing a solution to the predicament she's in.

"I would be the desert's justice, mightier than any tiger."

I went into Tiger Queen with such high hopes – the cover, the description, the promise! It's all there, and it was more than enough to get me really excited to see what Anne Sullivan had created here.

Maybe it wasn't entirely fair of me to have gotten too amped up, though, as ultimately, I did find myself to be more than a little disappointed. The feminist themes that I thought would be dominant here (titles like Tiger Queen and the promises of a woman doing what it takes to protect her people)... wasn't as strong as I had hoped.

I think what disappointed me the most is Kateri's sincere belief that she couldn't handle this situation independently. More than that, she didn't believe she could do it without breaking the rules that her people have come to rely on...which felt kind of problematic.

Overall, this was a decent read. Not what I hoped it would be, but still something capable of holding my attention.

Thanks to Blink and #NetGalley for making this book available for review. All opinions expressed are my own.

Read more reviews over at Quirky Cat's Fat Stacks

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 19 July, 2021: Finished reading
  • 19 July, 2021: Reviewed