In a world full of magic and mystery, eighteen-year-old Maia is the exiled princess of Comoros and rightful heir to the throne. Forced to live as a servant in her enemy’s home, Maia flees her captors and begins a perilous quest to save her people. To survive, she must use magic she has learned in secret—despite the fact that women are forbidden to control it. Hunted by enemies at every turn, Maia … Maia realizes that danger lurks within her, too. Her powers threaten to steal not only her consciousness but also her sense of right and wrong. Can she set herself free and save the realm she loves—even if her people have forgotten her? In bestselling author Jeff Wheeler’s fantasy epic, the answer may be only the beginning to Maia’s journey throughout the mystical land of Muirwood.
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One of those books that stays with you–Wheeler’s work makes you care about the characters, even the bad guys. You want to know where the characters go from here. Wheeler’s writing appeals to all ages from middle school to this 70+ year old Grandma. He writes about real heroes, male and female, who have counterparts in the real world, some with historical counterparts–written in such an intriguing and appealing way that you want to know more about the times these counterparts lived in. They appeal also because they are passionate about the higher power they serve, and model the virtues of loyalty and sacrifice. They love deeply and truly without making the reader see too much of what should remain (especially for young readers) behind closed doors! I seldom re-read books since I retired from teaching literature, but I have read most of his books at least twice, and eagerly await the next series.
Another winning start to a series by Jeff Wheeler. I’ve come to be very familiar with his fantasy worlds, which are all interconnected. This one was probably written before the Harbinger series, as the Harbinger series references what happens to Maia as Sera’s ancestor. Because of this, there were a few spoilers, but it really did not detract from my enjoyment.
Maia is a princess whose father disowns her due to his failed marriage to her mother, since her mother was never able to bear any more living children after Maia. Her father casts off her mother, though he is not allowed to legally divorce her since they were married by what they call an irrevocare sigil, and she was not unfaithful to him, though he was to her. He makes his mistress the new queen, and his children by her his legitimate heirs–and here, the story is very much a Cinderella tale. Maia is despised and humiliated in every way, and finally banished with a kishion as a “guide,” though he is meant to kill her under certain conditions. (This might be inspired by the huntsman who fails to kill Snow White?)
But this is where the comparison to the fairy tales breaks down. Maia finds that she has become a hatayra (sp? since I listened rather than read this), which essentially sounds like demonic possession. She did not give her consent, which is not usual, and she longs to be freed from the myriad one who possesses her when she sleeps. (Maia dreams when she is possessed by the myriad one, which is an effective device for conveying her back story.) She can only be freed by an aldermaston of an abbey, so she searches for her freedom and encounters obstacles along the way. She also finds an unlikely and ultimately forbidden romance.
Like most of Wheeler’s stories, this one is episodic and contains multiple twists and turns, rather than one clear conflict with rising and falling action. I always fall in love with his characters, though, and his plot twists keep me guessing!
My rating: *****
Language: none
Sexual content: none
Violence: fantasy only
Political content: fantasy only