Two women plot to overthrow a powerful empress in the first installment of May’s These Monstrous Gods duology.
In this epic fantasy world, the ruling class has not just economic power over the commoners but literal, magical power as well. These elites, called the alurea, are born bonded to gods called zmei, dragon spirits from another world whose power the alurea can channel and wield themselves. Empress Isidora is able to channel “godfire,” a rare and powerful skill that she uses to smite her enemies and terrorize her people into submission. Commoners Galina and Sera, who are secretly bonded to zmei themselves, were part of a plan to infiltrate Isidora’s court before the leaders of their rebel group were caught and executed. When Sera’s estranged husband, whose methods are violent and dangerous, puts his own schemes into motion, she and Galina decide to try their version of the old plan, which would bring Isidora down and end the alurea’s reign with minimal bloodshed. But when Galina gets into the palace and meets Isidora’s reclusive daughter, Vasilisa, Galina wonders if overthrowing an oppressive government will have to take precedence over her growing attraction to the princess. May’s mythology of dragon gods imprisoned in human host bodies is an effective magical system, and this series opener delivers on not just epic fantasy, but epic action and romance as well. Still, an overabundance of dramatic imagery, with voices sounding “like a blade skimming the surface of a lake,” might be a bit much for some readers.
A dragon-themed romance fantasy that’s appropriately steamy.