Skip to main content

Book Review: Kingdom of the Wicked

KINGDOM OF THE WICKED by Kerri Maniscalco
3 stars
Verdict:
Excellent start, then descends into Q&A. 

*Content warning for gore.* 

It's 19th Century Italy. Emilia and Vittoria are twins witches entrusted with powerful necklaces that should never touch. When Emilia's twin is murdered, she wants revenge and will even go as far as secretly summoning a demon in pursuit of finding her sister's killer.

The atmospheric setting combined with the use of Italian such a natural, smooth way made it very easy to love. I also loved how Emilie started out as the cautious twin but became more adventurous through necessity. The best bit about the book is the killer opening with all the right gothic witch vibes. It was insta-love for me with this book, and I thought I was preparing to write a raving review. 

The story descended into Q&A pretty quick after the blurb hooks were done. It made sense at first: capture a demon, question him. Then go find another demon, question them...repeat. Then it became the story crutch, where the only plot progression was a Q&A or rhetorical snarky questions to disguise the Q&A.

I wanted to live more in the fabulous world set up in the few first chapters - not read an FAQ about it!

I've seen a lot of reviews say that the writing is very easy to get along with it, which I guess is true...but I found the writing kind of meh. It straightforward and heavy on internal thoughts, with most of what happens explained several times with different musings, theories, and little sense of urgency, especially during action scenes. It has voice, but not much spark, which I think ultimately affected the pace for me. 

The book felt loooong too. It has some great moments but it's a tad predictable. Also, the drama could have possibly been avoided if the Nan acted to protect her grandchildren - which given her character, I think she would have. So the plot is kind of thin in that respect.

That said, it ended in a very interesting place. I have a feeling book two might be where the story really kicks off, and I'm curious to see where it's heading. I think the next book might be everything I wanted from this one, so I might not be done with this series yet.

Source: Thanks to publisher for a review copy via NetGalley. 

Buy the book using an affiliate link.

Comments

  1. Sorry - not my genre - I am such a wimp I can't even get pasted the cover

    ReplyDelete
  2. I love the cover but I don’t think this would for me. Your review was excellent!

    ReplyDelete
  3. while the cover looks cool, i very rarely end up reading this genre.. loved your review

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Your Best Character: Quiz and Contest

The best characters are put through hell and yet can still carry the story forward on their broken shoulders. Your plot will fall flat if your characters are one dimensional and strong characters can make a cliché story really shine; characterisation takes work and thought. The key to character development is to ask questions. Maybe spend time thinking about the scenarios that have happened to your character which won’t make the final cut of the novel. The questions below are designed to test that (to some degree). [NOW CLOSED, REVIEWS PENDING] Answer at least 5 of these in a comment with a link to your story and I’ll give you an in-depth review. Reviews are approximately 1000 words and take me well over an hour, so if you’re looking to polish up your manuscript then don’t miss out. Also, the opening chapter with the most interesting and well-developed character will be featured on this blog! Feel free to write about anyone as long as they feature in the same story. You can ans...

Book Review: Children of Blood and Bone

CHILDREN OF BLOOD AND BONE by Tomi Adeyemi 5 Stars Verdict: So good it hurts. The night magic died, Zélie watched her mother's murder as the Maji were slaughtered. Now Zélie has a chance to bring back magic. With the help of her brother and a rogue princess, she must outrun the crown prince and battle her self-doubts to restore magic to the world. This West-African inspired fantasy is powerful and all round awesome from start to finish. The writing is emotive and imaginative, the pacing is as perfect as it gets, and the characters are real with flaws and charm. I hardly know what to say. A brilliant book like this tells the editor in me to shut up and enjoy the ride, so I'd need to read it again to offer more of a critique. If every book was as good as this one, I would never be able to stop reading. The struggles, anger, and pain are carved into this book so deeply that the desires bleed through the pages and the triumphs feel earned. The emotion in this book is ...

Psycho Bites: Metaphors and Similes

I’m a psychology undergraduate doing my final year project on figurative language. If I find something interesting or relative to writing (the whole reason I picked a psycholinguistic project) then I’ll post it on here for you to read. Do we have a deal? I'll start with the psychological difference between a metaphor and a smile. A simile compares two concepts using ‘like’ or ‘as’ to. A metaphor is very similar except it states that the concepts are the same despite the reader knowing they’re not. It turns out metaphors are more powerful because we can read them faster. This was discovered by measuring how long it took for a person to read a sentence written in a metaphorical form (‘jobs are jails’) compared to how long it took to read as a simile (‘jobs are like jails’). Metaphors were read faster! They also provide different types of imagery. Similes provide more basic links which are true for both items where as metaphors seem to open your mind up to further possibilitie...