Prophecy's Daughter by Richard Phillips

Prophecy's Daughter (The Endarian Prophecy, #2)

by Richard Phillips

The epic fantasy continues as Lorness Carol’s burgeoning magical powers are the only hope in a destined war between good and primordial evil…

“The silent one in the west has awakened.” A tantalizing message reignites Kragan’s centuries-old fury to find and exterminate the unwitting young adversary prophesied to destroy him.

One step ahead of her pursuer, Lorness Carol, a warlord’s daughter and magic wielder, has led her people to a new stronghold in a verdant valley. Here, she’s been reunited with Blade, the assassin she has loved since childhood. But her spell book holds the secrets to powers she never imagined—powers that are not only expanding her abilities but challenging her sanity.

As Carol grows more desperate to learn and control the powers of enchantment she was born to wield, Kragan and his minions wage a war to destroy Carol’s destiny before it’s realized. But if her people require the summoning of an ancient darkness to save them, then by all the gods, she will bring it.

Reviewed by annieb123 on

4 of 5 stars

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Originally published on my blog: Nonstop Reader.

Prophecy's Daughter is the second book of the Endarian Prophecy trilogy by Richard Phillips. Released 9th January 2018 on Amazon's 47North imprint, it's 291 pages and available in paperback, ebook, and audiobook formats.

This 'bridge' book (filling the gap between the beginning and end of a trilogy), and indeed the series thus far, are well written grand quest fantasy. I read this second entry with an eye to how well it works as a standalone and the answer is, not very well. I recommend reading the series in order to get a feel for the characters and world building.

The protagonist is young and despite being powerful, she's still learning her capacities and adjusting to the idea of leadership. I felt that she was written sensitively and in character and even though I felt like poking her and saying 'grow up!' sometimes, it was in character and her motivations were well placed. The author gets a fair bit of allowance from me for the immaturity since this really struck me as mostly a YA/NA series.

The world building is solid with a myriad of characters but they're generally so well drawn and distinct that I've had no trouble keeping them apart in my head.

My only small quibble with the book is some of the names... they were distractingly modern American (Carol, Alan, etc). According to the dedication, the author's wife is called Carol... so that's sweet. I felt myself falling out of the story fairly regularly because of the names. All in all, not a very big issue.

Definitely worth a read for fans of quest/campaign fantasy.

Three and a half stars. Entertaining and readable.
Worth noting for Kindle Unlimited subscribers. This title is available in the KU subscription.

Disclosure: I received an ARC at no cost from the author/publisher for review purposes.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 3 January, 2019: Finished reading
  • 3 January, 2019: Reviewed