It was straightforward and compelling, but it did lack some of the magic that her first series had. I wasn’t as drawn in as I was with Daughter of the Pirate King. Tricia Levenseller’s writing style was good. “My soul has worth, and I won’t let it depart this world just yet.” She is tasked with killing the god that has been threatening her village for centuries or die trying. Except, mattugrs are designed to be impossible, and a suicide mission at best, and hers is no exception. However, she may return if she completes her mattugr. On the day of her trial to become a warrior, she is betrayed by someone she trusted and banished from her village. Warrior of the Wild follows Rasmira, the daughter of the Seravin village leader. Content Warning: Violence, Death, Abuse, Assault, Rape Mention (very brief), Human Sacrifice (brief)// ‘You want someone who lifts you up, not tries to bring you down.’” “‘A man who finds his masculinity threatened by a powerful woman is no man at all,’ he says. While it might have lacked some of the magic of Tricia Levenseller’s previous series, it still stole my heart. Review in a Nutshell: Warrior of the Wild is an addictive read.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |