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The Prince Without Sorrow
The Prince Without Sorrow: Book One of the Obsidian Throne | Maithree Wijesekara
1 post | 1 read
Drawing on inspiration from the Mauryan Empire of Ancient India, debut author Maithree Wijesekara plunges readers into the first amazing book of the Obsidian Throne trilogy, a new fantasy series of hunted witches, romantic angst, and political intrigue. Perfect for fans of The Hurricane Wars and The Jasmine Throne. A prince born into violence, seeking peace. Prince Ashoka is the youngest son of the tyrannical Emperor Adil Maurya. Considered an outcast by his father for his rejection of the emperor’s brutal onslaught against the witches of the empire, Ashoka longs for change. When the sudden and unexpected death of his father leaves the monarchy in disarray, Ashoka is sent to govern a tumultuous region annexed by Emperor Adil that is terrorized by nature spirits—a task many see as doomed to fail. Suspected by a disdainful governor and evaded by distrustful witches, Ashoka must question his rigid ideals and fight against becoming the one person he despises the most—his father. A witch shackled by pacifism, seeking revenge. Shakti is a mayakari: a witch bound by a pacifist code. After witnessing the murder of her aunt and village at the hands of the emperor, Shakti hurtles down a path of revenge, casting a curse with unexpected consequences. Posing as a maidservant in the famed palace of the Mauryas and armed with newfound powers beyond her imagination, Shakti attempts to dismantle the monarchy from within by having the royal progeny ruin themselves and turn their father’s legacy into nothing but ash. In a world where nature spirits roam the land, and witches are hunted to extinction, Ashoka and Shakti will be forced to grapple with the consequences of power: to take it for themselves or risk losing it completely.
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review
PuddleJumper
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Panpan

This had a lot of interesting ideas but was poorly executed. The writing was clunky and often a sentence would contradict itself which was very confusing.

I'm going with pan because the writing was hard to read. Any good ideas were lost.

LeeRHarry Ooh no I have this on my TBR, mainly because the author is from Melbourne where I live. Sounds like the writing is going to annoy me. 😬 2mo
PuddleJumper @LeeRHarry A few of the reviews on Goodreads include extracts if you want to check. I never get on well with metaphor heavy books. 2mo
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