Sunday, August 5, 2018

The Hundredth Queen by Emily R. Queen


As an orphan ward of the Sisterhood, eighteen-year-old Kalinda is destined for nothing more than a life of seclusion and prayer. Plagued by fevers, she’s an unlikely candidate for even a servant’s position, let alone a courtesan or wife. Her sole dream is to continue living in peace in the Sisterhood’s mountain temple.
But a visit from the tyrant Rajah Tarek disrupts Kalinda’s life. Within hours, she is ripped from the comfort of her home, set on a desert trek, and ordered to fight for her place among the rajah’s ninety-nine wives and numerous courtesans. Her only solace comes in the company of her guard, the stoic but kind Captain Deven Naik.
Faced with the danger of a tournament to the death—and her growing affection for Deven—Kalinda has only one hope for escape, and it lies in an arcane, forbidden power buried within her.

I have mixed feelings about this book. On one hand there is beautiful writing, excellent world building, well defined characters, romance, fantasy, bravery, and of course magic. On the other hand there is slavery, sexual slavery, polygamy, and murder. However, I feel the good balances the bad and the author never condones the negative. It is just presented as the culture of the world these people live in. The evils in this book are never portrayed as acceptable, but as obstacles the heroine has to  overcome if she is to survive. She is strong and smart. The protagonist adapts, she is not a weakling whining and complaining about her plight, but a character we are able to watch grow and evolve into a brave and likable young potential queen. Each chapter is exciting, leaving the reader wanting to know what is going to happen next, and in spite of the obvious negative connotations toward the treatment of women, the author counter balances this with strong female roles, and relationships throughout the story. 

Due to some of the more intense graphic scenes in this novel I would not recommend it for younger readers. There are gory fight scenes and more talk of sexual involvement than I would recommend for children. This book is for a young adult audience and higher. 

I give The Hundredth Queen 4 out of 5 stars

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