
Visitants: Stories of Fallen Angels and Heavenly Hosts
Book
IN THE DARKNESS, SOMETHING WICKED SPREADS ITS WINGS THE ETERNAL BATTLE between fallen angels and...

Not Before Sundown
Johanna Sinisalo and Herbert Lomas
Book
Not Before Sundown is an enchanting novel that has become an international sensation. Angel, a young...
Horror fantasy

Ethereal Custody: Anthologies
Book
Those born in an underground slum are deprived of love and severed from nature. As a last-ditch...

Eldritch Horror
Tabletop Game
The world is on the cusp of catastrophe as an evil and ancient being begins to stir. Vicious...

Unclean Spirits (Gods and Monsters #1)
Book
The force of nature that is Chuck Wendig returns with an original urban fantasy novel, creating a...
Urban Fantasty Fantasy Horror Fiction Mythology

Goddess in the Stacks (553 KP) rated To Kill a Kingdom in Books
Jun 8, 2018
The book alternates between the viewpoints of Princess Lira, the siren known as the Prince's Bane, and Prince Elian. Their name is at the start of each chapter that is written from their viewpoint, but it's small and easily missed. I wish it was in a larger, more obvious font, because I kept having to flip back a few pages to figure out who I was reading.
I loved seeing the character growth of Lira as she comes to know the humans, and realizes there is another possibility besides just following her mother's brutal orders. She learns, watching Elian's people follow him, that there is a way to inspire loyalty rather than compel it by magic and brutality.
Lira definitely shows more character growth than Elian does, and the book never really explains how Elian gets past the fact that she's killed so many princes.
The beginning of the book was also a little slow - I actually set it aside for a couple of weeks while reading other things and worried a little that I was never going to pick it up again. Worried because I don't usually not finish books unless they're terrible, not because I actually wanted to find out what happened. I didn't get invested in the characters until probably about halfway through the book. Books usually catch me far before that point.
So - it was okay. If you want predatory mermaids, I would recommend Into the Drowning Deep long before this one. Though if you want more fantasy with a touch of romance, and less horror, then this is probably the book you want. Just be warned it takes some time to hit its stride.
You can find all my reviews at http://goddessinthestacks.wordpress.com

The Count Lucanor
Video Game Watch
Once upon a time, there was a poor boy named Hans who lived with his mother near the woods. On his...
adventure role-playing

The Astounding Illustrated History of Science Fiction
Dave Golder, Jess Nevins, Russ Thorne and Sarah Dobbs
Book
A truly astonishing, illustrated history of Science fiction, covering fantasy, and horror, with...

The Strange Case of the Alchemist's Daughter (The Extraordinary Adventures of the Athena Club #1)
Book
Based on some of literature’s horror and science fiction classics, this is the story of a...
Horror fantasy

Cyn Armistead (14 KP) rated The Nightmare Stacks: A Laundry Files Novel in Books
Feb 23, 2018
There are a fair number of cringe-worthy scenes, if you (like me) are embarrassed when anyone else is. Of course, this is a comedy/horror/science fiction/fantasy series, so there are the requisite horrid things in the plot. If you've gotten this far in the series, I shouldn't need to warn you about that. I really wouldn't choose this volume as an entry point if I were you.