Monday, August 25, 2025

Review: The Sun Blessed Prince, by Lindsey Byrd


 

Prince Elician is a Giver – a closely-guarded secret. He can heal any wound and bring the dead back to life. He also can’t be killed, so is cursed to watch his country wage an endless war. Reapers can kill with a single touch. And when one attacks Prince Elician near a hotly contested battlefield, the Reaper expects a terrible punishment. Instead, Elician offers him a new life on enemy territory.
Cat, as Elician calls him, hadn’t realized he could ever find someone who would make life worth living. Yet Elician’s enemies plan to turn his kindness against him. As the pieces of a deadly plot come together, tensions escalate at court and on the battlefield. The fires of conflict burst into new flame – but can those who wield the powers of life and death find peace?

"To heal a wound, you need to start small."

Lindsey Byrd's The Sun Blessed Prince is an excellent epic fantasy with a slow-burn achillean romance subplot. First in a duology, this book sets the stage for what promises to be an explosive conclusion by introducing a varied cast of characters, two realms at constant war, and two very different sets of beliefs based on the gods of Life and Death. Blessed by their respective gods, Cat and Elician are going to do their best to change things for the people in their realms.

Their relationship develops slowly. It's not too much of a spoiler to say that they're separated for most of the book, but their brief time together made an impression on both, and when they reunite they pick up from where they've left, changed forever by what occurred in the meantime. The final chapter is a very moving piece of writing, and almost brought me to tears.

Romance is decidedly not the focus. This is a great political fantasy with lots of moving pieces, twists (I spoiled myself on a big one by looking for the second book while still reading, but there's still so much more going on), and social commentary on slavery especially. There's a great focus on science, unexpected but fairly contained, and it worked well within the narrative. It's a big book with big themes and a list of trigger warnings one may want to check out before reading.

The trio of POVs is completed by Elician's young sister, a girl who’s grappling with her powers and with her place in the world. Her narration might feel out of place, but it provides much context, and her journey is one to pay attention too. The rest of the cast has its moments to shine, starting from Elician's devoted best friend.

My only gripe with this book and the only reason why I'm not giving it five stars is that the passage of a time in a certain portion of the book was unclear, and the same portion would have benefitted from a few more chapters with Elician's POV.

The Sun Blessed Prince is an incredible debut.

✨ 4.5 stars

 

🤴🏻☀ So you want to read about duty-bound princes?

Here's my review of Laura R. Samotin's The Sins on their Bones 


 

Monday, August 18, 2025

Snippet: The Gilda Stories, by Jewelle Gomez


 

This remarkable novel charts the unending life of Gilda, a young woman who - after escaping slavery in Louisiana in 1850 - is made into a vampire. After being initiated into eternal life as one who 'shares the blood', Gilda spends the next two hundred years searching for a way to exist in the world.

“Pledge yourself to pursue only life, never bitterness or cruelty.”

Jewelle Gomez' The Gilda Stories is a lesbian classic and an extraordinary exploration of the horror of slavery and racism, combined with all the trappings of a vampire novel. This literary classic doesn't have a plot per se, but it's more of a sequence of moments over the course of two hundred years, and the reader follows happily along as Gilda meets people and makes fundamental changes. At its core, it's a novel about being Black and queer in America, and about giving back what you're given. It's a healing experience, a beautiful read.

✨ 4 stars

Monday, August 11, 2025

Review: Confounding Oaths, by Alexis Hall

The year is 1815, and Mr. John Caesar is determined to orchestrate a successful coming-out for his younger sister, Mary. Despite his best efforts, he is thwarted by the various interventions of a ragtag regiment of soldiers, a mysterious military cult, and a malicious fairy godmother.
When Mary is cursed by the fair folk, the dandyish Mr. Caesar is forced to work with the stolidly working-class—yet inescapably heroic—Captain James to rescue her. While Mr. Caesar is no stranger to dallying with soldiers, until now he's never expected one to stay. Or wanted one to. But even if the captain felt the same, there'd be no chance of anything lasting between them. After all, he and Mr. Caesar come from different worlds.

"The world is chaos. We try to understand it and to shape it, but we cannot unsee it."

Alexis Hall's Confounding Oaths is a sequel, but as the spirited narrator tells us, we don't need to have read the first installment Mortal Follies (HERE you can read my review) to enjoy it, although the reading experience might be dampened if you haven't. Puck returns here to tell another story about the same family, as the helpful cousin from the first book is brought to the fore, and his immediate family faces the dangers this time. This tale delivers just as the first, with the right mix of humor (coming from Puck's witty comments), gravitas, and swoon-worthy romance.

As with the first book, the threat comes from both the supernatural world and the mundane, and we see more of the fairy court and its workings, more fairy characters, and gods again. We also see issues of class and racism, which didn't appear in the first book, adding some much needed edge; and the exploration of sexism and homophobia from the first book of course make a return, with a focus on what society deems beautiful. As Puck warns in the beginning, there is cruelty in these novels, but also a relatively happy resolution.

The romance goes fast, going from a strong initial physical attraction, which is immediately acted upon, to the slow and tender lowering of the walls the duo had to build around their hearts. The focus is mostly on Mr. Caesar and his struggles as the first and only male child, but Captain James has his say in more ways than one.

There are a lot more characters in this one, but they are all treated with care. Maelys and Georgiana return, of course, allowing us to see what became of them, and so does Miss Bickle, who I imagine will be the main character of a possible new novel.

Confounding Oaths is a delightful romp.

✨ 4 stars

 

🦋🕷 So you want to read about conniving fae in an alternate England?

Here's my review of Trip Galey's A Market of Dreams and Destiny  


 

Monday, August 4, 2025

Review: The Incandescent, by Emily Tesh


 

Doctor Walden is the Director of Magic at Chetwood Academy and one of the most powerful magicians in England. Her days consist of meetings, teaching A-Level Invocation to four talented, chaotic sixth formers, more meetings, and securing the school's boundaries from demonic incursions.
Walden is good at her job―no, Walden is great at her job. But demons are masters of manipulation. It’s her responsibility to keep her school with its six hundred students and centuries-old legacy safe. And it’s possible the entity Walden most needs to keep her school safe from―is herself.

"What matters is how you meet failure, and how you face up to it."

Emily Tesh's The Incandescent is a scintillating standalone novel following a competent professor in her thirties as she faces the greatest battle of all: grading. This book really delves into the minutiae of working as a teacher, with a focus on the dynamics of a classrom, the relationships with colleagues, and the administrative part, with the added twist of it being a magical academy of course. It's fresh and interesting and it really breathes to life in a captivating way. At the same time, it handles the challenges of acadamia from an intersectional point of view while also showing that adults don't have everything perfectly together and it's a challenge of its own. It's very hopeful in its discussion of depression, trauma, and bad coping mechanisms. 

The magical plot slowly unveils itself as powerful demons living in the shadow of the school make themselves known and it falls to Saffy to face them. The book can be roughly divided in two parts, with two different threats to face, while Saffy, a true disaster bisexual, is also torn between the hot magical guard in charge of school security, a competent butch with a sword, and the new security advisor, an asshole who feels very sure of himself. The resolution of this particular plot point is worth the wait and frustration.

The star of the book, though, is the phoenix, a powerful demon who learns to navigate the human world and human concepts while being so utterly alien. Their PoV gave me chills and moved me to tears.

The Incandescent is an intriguing concept done perfectly right.

✨ 4.5 stars

 

📖🦚 So you want to read about queer magical professors?

Here's my reviews of Madeleine Nakamura's duology