Jill Chriswell has documented this book and it is narrated by Alana Kerr Collins and Tim Campbell. These Souls of Fire and Steel and Kingdom of Ice and Bone are excellent narrations of Alana Kerr Collins.
Consume brilliantly. Love wildly. Each offspring of Glasnith learned the final expressions of Aillira, the god-gifted human whose destined relationship started a conflict between divine beings and men and Lira of tribe Stone understands the story better than most. As a relative of Aillira and god-gifted by her own doing, she can peruse individuals’ spirits to see somebody’s actual pith with just a bit of her hand.
At the time when a brilliant-haired champion washed up on the shores of her country, one of the unfortunate pirates from the place that is known for the Frozen Sun ‘Lira’ helped the injured man as opposed to handing him over. After perusing his spirit, she understands Reyker is not the same as his brethren who assault the shores of Glasnith. He trusted in her that he has been reviled with what his kin call fight frenzy, compelled to battle for the warlord known as the Dragon, a not entirely settled to reignite the old conflict that ‘Aillira’ began. As Lira and Reyker structure, a bond illegal by both their tribes, the rage of the Dragon falls upon them and all of Glasnith and Lira ended up confronting a similar terrible destiny as her predecessor.
The main great piece of this book was the female storyteller. It had potential, however, all at once felt off. Like a melody being played in some unacceptable key. It’s practically great however not exactly. The MCs settled on the stupidest decisions again and again. It was difficult to monitor every one of the divine beings and clans. The plot and characters pulled me in and would not give up.