Queen of Stars by Dave Duncan

Queen of Stars (The Starfolk, #2)

by Dave Duncan

While discovering the truth behind his half-human, half-elven parentage, master swordsman Rigel not only defeated the horrific monsters of the Starlands, but also thwarted Prince Vildiar’s dark designs to conquer the elven realms.Now, despite his fate to die an early, violent death if he remains in the Starlands, Rigel refuses to return to Earth, consumed as he is by love for the newly crowned Queen Talitha. But this passion is perilous: Vildiar has hatched multiple conspiracies to usurp the throne, and a vision has revealed that if Rigel and Talitha ever consummate their love, it will only hasten Rigel’s...Read more

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3 of 5 stars

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2.5 stars - Metaphorosis Reviews

Half-elf half-human Rigel is the elf-prince's bodyguard, but quarreling with the queen, and there's another elf-noble looking to kill them all and take over the kingdom. Rigel recruits another half-elf from Earth, which brings its own complications.

I was thoroughly bored by the prequel to Queen of Stars, King of Swords, and didn't open this book with much enthusiasm. For most of its length, my opinion didn't change. Rigel sells the elfin Starlands as 'better', but we have to assume that means 'despite the required servitude, second-class status, and people trying to kill you'. It's a lot to swallow.

Duncan spends a lot of the first quarter of the book providing an infodump about the prequel. It's well-handled, but it goes on for a long time. I'd actually have preferred a less-sophisticated but shorter lump of backstory. For those who start the series here, though, it should work well.

Much of the book is a continuation of the theme of the prequel - good-hearted, knows-his-place Rigel will do anything for the beautiful queen. It's so syrupy that it's hard to slog through. Much to my surprise, though, the book ends well - with some genuine pathos and a close that finally caught my interest. My copy contains an excerpt of the next book, Knave of Imps, which answered a key question, but still left me wanting to know more.

So, a slow book with a surprising upturn. It's a strange thing, but after pretty heartily disliking most of the first two books, I could see buying the next.

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  • Started reading
  • 30 November, 2016: Finished reading
  • 30 November, 2016: Reviewed