
This story is sweet, and also surprisingly dark. I loved the juxtaposition. It’s fundamentally about how true love can weaken us, and why we might choose to continue loving anyway once our resulting weakness is revealed to the world.
The Half-Hearted Queen opens with our heroine, Nym, under duress, captured by King Nicosia, and weakened by literally having given away half her heart. The metaphor lasted with me throughout the book as Nym struggled to decide whether to protect or risk even more of herself.
I absolutely loved the first act of this book. In some ways I feel like it should have been the entire story. The stakes were high, and Nym’s resilience on full display.
I didn’t love the latter half of the story as much. I sat with it for a few days before writing this review in order to let the feeling crystallize into words: Prince Renn felt like a different person than he was in the first book, removed from nearly all of his physical and emotional context.
I enjoyed the grounded feeling of the first book, as Nym settled into the palace and slowly learned the people who lived there. The second book felt less grounded, and some of the characters’ motivations revealed themselves as if from nowhere, suddenly enough that they felt unearned. There was a prophecy involved that still confuses me.
However, I think this is a duology that will benefit from being read together, in quick succession and as one story rather as two separate volumes. I think if the first book had been fresher for me, the second’s reliance on the remembered emotional scene-setting in book 1 would be less of a hurdle for the reader to overcome.
This story is sweet, and also surprisingly dark. I loved the juxtaposition. It’s fundamentally about how true love can weaken us, and why we might choose to continue loving anyway once our resulting weakness is revealed to the world.
The Half-Hearted Queen opens with our heroine, Nym, under duress, captured by King Nicosia, and weakened by literally having given away half her heart. The metaphor lasted with me throughout the book as Nym struggled to decide whether to protect or risk even more of herself.
I absolutely loved the first act of this book. In some ways I feel like it should have been the entire story. The stakes were high, and Nym’s resilience on full display.
I didn’t love the latter half of the story as much. I sat with it for a few days before writing this review in order to let the feeling crystallize into words: Prince Renn felt like a different person than he was in the first book, removed from nearly all of his physical and emotional context.
I enjoyed the grounded feeling of the first book, as Nym settled into the palace and slowly learned the people who lived there. The second book felt less grounded, and some of the characters’ motivations revealed themselves as if from nowhere, suddenly enough that they felt unearned. There was a prophecy involved that still confuses me.
However, I think this is a duology that will benefit from being read together, in quick succession and as one story rather as two separate volumes. I think if the first book had been fresher for me, the second’s reliance on the remembered emotional scene-setting in book 1 would be less of a hurdle for the reader to overcome.