By Jay Kristoff
This review comes late and apologise for
this but I have been a slave to another trilogy I started and quickly finished
after I finished this book. My last post reviewed the Storm dancer the first
book of the lotus wars series. I now review its sequel. The Kinslayer the
second of the Lotus wars series.
In the after mass of The Stormdancer our
heroin Yukiko has fallen into a deep desperation brought on by the fate of her
beloved father, as a result her powers are spiraling out of control and she
struggles to come to terms of the maelstrom of events that she and her Thunder
tiger Buruu have just survived. Realising her powers are getting more out of
control with her unstable moods Yukiko and Buruu must journey north in search
of answers. Waylaid for most of the duration of the book Yukiko and Buruu find
themselves dancing a deadly dance against tattooed monks, foreigners and
Thunder tigers who all have their own agenda.
Meanwhile back into Shima the empire has
been thrown into chaos and the only way to calm the waters and stifle the
rebellion after the Shōgun’s death is to name the new Shōgun.
Hiro, the man that once seeked the hand of
the stormdancer is now trapped in a political game to place him at the head of
the empire. Set to wed the surviving sister Ashia of the Shōgun Yoritomo. Ashia
daily wishes that she had been allowed to die after the beating her brother had
given her. All the while the rebellion the Kage organization have set in motion
with help of Yukiko, is now poised to attack the capital city with hopes to
disrupt and maybe destroy the up and coming wedding to make Hiro Shōgun.
We meet new characters in the form of street
rats Hana and Yoshi brother and sister who have lived and fought on the streets
of the imperial city for most of their lives, both have been hiding a great secret
all of their lives, like Yukiko the siblings can communicate with animals and
this aids to their survival thus far in the brutal dance of the streets.
This book is brutal in its last few chapters
Yoshi and Hana are swept up with the fight for rebellion against the guild and
the Shōgun’s men, whilst they run for their lives from the Yakuza. At the end
we are left wanting more answers and feel cheated for not having had more Buruu
and Yukoki fighting against the wedding and aiding the rebels.
I loved the Siblings Yoshi (Mario brothers)
and Hana (Can you get a more generic Japanese girls name?) but in my otauku
heart of hearts, I loved the names and the ties I made with the characters
through them. Allowing for them to be what they were and wanting more chapters
surrounding Yoshi his lover and his kid sister who took up what I thought was Yukiko’s
space whist she was off finding herself.
I wait for the next book with bated breath
and just hope Jay Kristoff will be more gentle to our favourite characters… or
maybe not *evil grin* And loving every second of it.
Love
The Otaku Bookworm.
No comments:
Post a Comment