Your rating:
For fans of Sarah J. Maas and Holly Black, The Forest King's Daughter is an enemies-to-forbidden-lovers romance from the New York Times bestselling author of Frostblood. Once upon a time, among the bloodred trees of Thirstwood, a young forest princess became friends with a lonely demon boy. He gifted her an amber ring, a worthless trinket…or so he thought...because no sooner did he slide it onto her finger than the demon queen and forest king declared war. Years later, Cassia is a crucial force in her father’s army, wielding her ring of light that can blind and disorient hundreds of demons at a time. Then battle-hardened Zeru abducts her, planning to steal the ring back to fix his costly childhood mistake. Exhausted, terrified, and more than a little mistrusting, Cassia is forced to travel with Zeru to a place they both believed only existed in storybooks, one where their childhood friendship slowly rekindles into something much more. But it's only a matter of time before the war they've escaped comes for them, and a hidden threat to forest folk and demons alike grows in the shadows. From the author of the Frostblood Saga comes the first book in an enchanting, adventure-filled fantasy series about the daughters of the powerful forest king, sure to leave readers breathless and desperate for more.
No posts yet
Kick off the convo with a theory, question, musing, or update
Your rating:
There’s something about enemies-to-lovers books that just keep me coming back to the trope. What I like even more is when the characters have history – where they’re friends before and then something happens to turn them into enemies. But as they’re (begrudgingly) spending time with each other years later… that hatred slowly turns into something else. Listen, it’s just good every time. And that was certainly true here. Cassia and Zeru had that in spades. Their species, not to mention their families were at odds and total enemies. Of course, you know what happened – we all know what happens in an enemies-to-lovers book. What changes is the journey – how they went from wanting to kill each other to kiss.
The characters were well-written and developed well alongside the plot – I thought Blake did that well. Both, however, were quite slow-paced. I don’t have an issue with slow-paced books in the slightest but it felt like the book wanted to be paced faster and the developments were slowing it down. Now and then the book seemed to be at a faster pace and then it would just slow down like the author remembered she wanted it to be slow. Though with slow-paced books there’s more time to slowly develop everything – which happened here. We slowly got to know the characters, their motivations, their personalities, and their stories all develop.
We also got a slow romance, which was nice, even though I wanted it to speed up at times. Cassia and Zeru complement each other and it’ll be interesting to see where they go from here – what they do and how they face the dangers together. Of course, and how they grow more in love with each other – because they are quite cute together. I liked how their relationship tied in so well with the plot – I like when that happens and when the author does it well. Still I would’ve liked the pacing of the romance to have been faster, but like I said earlier – it didn’t deter me from liking it.
The plot was largely about secrets and the histories of the two species – which wasn’t handled like it could’ve been. I think what added to it was the constant feeling of the book being a debut novel. Then I found out the author has a whole other series aka very much not a debut book. But the feeling that it was still stayed. Of course I’m not saying that debut novels are bad in any way – just that this book seemed like it was Blake’s debut. I have no idea what the other two books will be about (as it’s a trilogy) as I thought the book did well as a standalone) but we’ll see when those books come out. Maybe about the other sisters?
It's what I expected out of YA, even if I wanted something else! The language is pretty on par for YA. I didn't feel particularly invested in either mc or ml, so my interest was waning a lot, especially with the plot being what it was.
The plot was interesting at first, but then gradually slowed down and I no longer really knew why we were being paced the way the plot travelled.... It felt like there were too many plot points, too many pockets of things happening, that didn't fit the vibe or genre. I think it would have benefited it if wasn't slotted into YA and closer to actual adult, or maybe even new adult. The constraints of YA made it feel as though it was being limited from a larger worldbuilding. The plot points themselves felt very mediocre, too. More or less was bored with the book by 30% or so? The pacing could've been done much better.
The two main characters themselves were also pretty boring. Our little mc especially. I think the ml could've been given more space to be more of a personality, but erm dark and brooding go off I guess.
Highly unlikely I will read the sequel.