When a story contains the phrase āFor Bone Daddyā and its uttered by a army of skelebabies in the middle of a rollicking bone rattling battle, well, you just know the book is going to be epic.
For all its short length, Sherwood packs a ton of high quality action, snarky humor, dubious necromancer goings on, and an ever- widening search for the bones of a sentient skeleton dragon called Steve.
Iām so committed to this series and found family of absolutely glorious people, young sorcerers in training in tow included. Itās hilarious, sexy, stunning and entertaining on every level.
I canāt wait for the pirates.
Dive into the series right at the beginning and then follow along. Itās all fabulous.
Love these covers.
Series and side stories
š„How I Stole the Princess’s White Knight and Turned him to Villainy-6 books
š„How Tan Acquired an Apprentice
š„How I Took the King on a Bone-a-Fide Quest of Piracy, Piemu, and Profit:Bone
Do you wish to deploy the necromancer to fight? (YES) (no)
Niran: The leg boneās connected to the ~ leg bone. The leg boneās connected to the ~
Tan: Sword hilt~ the sword hiltās connected to the bad guy~ hear the voice of the Steve~!
Steve: My boooOOOOoooone!
Tags:
Necromancers, fight!, itās Niranās time to shine, lawless city is our friend, onsen nookie, Steve makes a bad alarm clock, look at me, Iām the captain now, stinky city, Sword of the Sea makes an appearance, Steve needs his fainting couch to clutch his pearls upon, ragdoll Steve
In one sweet, moving, and foreboding scene from the Prologue, Lark manages to set her characters and simultaneously break our hearts even before the present day story begins.
Itās a succinct , heartbreaking sentence and weāre pulled in and completely crushed emotionally.
Iāve been a huge fan of Larkās Perilous Courts series since I read the amazing Prince and Assassin book with itās haunting, damaged character of Whisper, one of the famed Kennel hound assassins who ends up with a Prince of the intriguing Silaise Kingdom, Julien. It was my favorite book, until now. Mostly because of the Kennel Hounds aspect and the character of Whisper who has managed to remain such a strong, complicated character throughout the series.
Stories one through three centered around the three Princes, their magical abilities, and the power structure of their matriarchal Kingdom of Silaise.
Now Lark switches focus to a new realm but one thatās had a huge impact on the other stories and kingdoms. Thatās Draskora, an island Kingdom thatās incredibly powerful, incredibly wealthy and with a magical ability for weather. But more importantly, itās has two things no one else has and everyone else wants. Scalestone, a purple stone that is mined and dragons that need Scalestone. The kingdom that has one, controls the other.
Its people are also known for their purple colored eyes (see Whisper), an effect that comes from the Scalestone. A harsh, cruel place that is mirrored by its rulers, King Imrik, his bloodmage wife, and his three sons, two of whom are adopted through coercion treaties with neighboring kingdoms forced to give up their sons. The other a natural son considered spoiled if a bit unstable.
Prince and Bodyguard starts the Draskoran three son arc.
This is the story of how Vana Kaiskara Tellik of the Kingdom of Kaiskara became Vana Dire, adopted son of Imrik, wielder of storm powers, along with his bloodguard Daromir Azri.
Itās got everything. Magic, dragons, political schisms within the ruling family, layers of pain and damage to the characters and unbelievable chemistry to the dynamics between Vana and Daromir.
The author continues to weave her world arc threads into the ongoing drama, here bringing back characters from prior novels as well as elements such as the Kennel Hounds, and Fellrin fellcats, which will help set up the next novel.
Itās a series that is playing out like a huge board game but we canāt yet see all the pieces. Iām sure Fellrin or Kaiskara is coming,knowledge of each of those places have been very interesting but limited.
And the prize or prizes at stake are Scalestone and dragons which will see that whoever has them has the power or potential to control what the other kingdoms are able to do logistically, monetarily and influentially.
But as rich as this is in details, as layered in cultural fabrication and depth of imagination, it beats at its center a heart thatās guaranteed to make you weep more than once , and then want to shout for joy.
Itās that fabulous a story and a journey for two men over time.
Yes, definitely my favorite. And one Iām highly recommending, along with this incredible series. But it has to be read in order to understand the complex character relationships, the situations and story development.
Vana Dire canāt show weakness if he wants to survive the Draskoran court. The only man he can be vulnerable with is DaromirāVanaās magic-bound bodyguard. The binding lets them share each otherās pain, and Vana depends on Daromirās comfort as much as his services as a guard. Vana could never risk their friendship.
Even if he craves far more than Daromirās loyalty.
Daromir Azri sees a side of Vana nobody else sees. Behind closed doors, the cold, elegant prince is kindhearted. Vulnerable. He needs Daromir. If Daromirās devotion sometimes feels like something else? Daromir must be mistaken. His duty comes first, and heāll do anything to protect Vanaāincluding one thing heās never done before:
Heās keeping a secret.
Then their magic bond changes, and suddenly Vana and Daromir donāt just share pain anymore. Each shared sensation pushes their friendship to the breaking point, just when Vana and Daromir need each other most. Theyāre facing a mysterious ambassador, a chaos-stirring prince, the consequences of past schemesā
And an assassin seeking Vanaās life.
Prince and Bodyguard is a gay fantasy romance with pining, hurt/comfort, and codependent cuddling. The Perilous Courts series is best read in order, and Prince and Bodyguard begins a new three-book arc about the princes of Draskora.