Title: Falling Kingdoms
Author: Morgan Rhodes
Publisher: Razor Bill (2012)
Genre(s): Fiction, Fantasy
Length: 412 pages
Synopsis: The land of Mytica was once a peaceful place. Its prosperity and harmony were maintained by the power of the Kindred, four crystals uniting the power of the four elements, but the crystals were lost long ago. Now the land and the people are divided, separated into three kingdoms with no love lost between them. Tensions are rising, and soon war seems inevitable. The king of Limeros to the north is prepared to make alliances with the chieftain of Paelsia, ready to march on Auranos in the south. Princess Cleo of Auranos, however, has concerns of her own. Her elder sister Emilia is dying, and nothing short of powerful magic can save her. She's prepared to brave hostile territory and her father's wrath to find the cure, but there are powers even greater at play in Mytica, powers that were prophesied more than sixteen years ago...
My Rating: 2 Stars
My Opinion: I knew that I was not going to like this book about ten pages in. I found myself rolling my eyes at the situations and dialogue that early, and while I hoped that it just needed some time to get up to speed, it never did. The characters' speech has a tendency to sound out of place in this supposedly high-fantasy world, and while there does seem to be a solid skeleton of plot beneath this story, it's clad in spiderwebs rather than flesh. The characters are marched through the story, told where they're going and how they feel by the plot, rather than letting their unique traits dictate their actions. I was immediately put off by the "Cast of Characters" listed in the front of the book... the cast is really quite small, and if the reader can't be expected to remember even that scant list... well, if that's the case, I'm not sure how anyone ever got through a work by Tolkien. I do read a lot of fantasy, both good and bad; while my expectations are high, I also understand what makes a good fantasy and where they fall short. This one, sadly, had all the latter qualities.
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