She has a lush, luxurious, highly colourful style which I find enchanting. Full of twists and turns and magic and spellbinding imagination, she is one of my favourites in the genre. This is the beginning of a trilogy ‘Lionwolf’ but complete within itself. It’s an exhilarating rollercoaster read of ghosts, gods and demons set in a frozen waste land. Not to be missed; it’s fantastic. Comparison: Katharine Kerr, Jenny Wurtz, Ursula K Le Guin. Similar this month: David and Leigh Eddings, Andy Secombe (for comic fantasy).
An epic fantasy adventure of wild creatures, enchanted landscapes, and noble destinies In a land of unending winter, the High Magus Thryfe travels with haste to the city of Ruk Kar to warn Vuldir, King Accessorate, of a growing force of envy and darkness. One of Vuldir's daughters, the seventeen-year-old Saphay, is to wed the Jafn chieftain Athluan, but Thryfe foresees that the marriage will lead to the destruction of all the Ruk kings, their lineage, and their people. Disregarding the magician's ominous words, Saphay sets off toward the East and her betrothedonly to meet disaster. Athluan, Saphay's husband-to-be, hears rumors of a blond maiden in royal clothes entombed in a towering pyramid of ice. It is Saphay, and she is alive. The royal wedding ensues and soonperhaps too soonSaphay becomes pregnant. As time goes on, the son she births will show signs of a divine and heroic destiny.