The Burning Kingdoms
Books | Young Adult Fiction / Fantasy / Epic
3.9
Sally Green
The heart-pounding conclusion to the daring Smoke Thieves trilogy.In this conclusion to the epic Smoke Thieves trilogy, the world has erupted into all-out war. King Aloysius is mining powerful demon smoke and using it to fuel an unstoppable army of children. March, now banished for treason, has joined up with this boy army. Forbidden from ever seeing Edyon again, and overwhelmed by his own betrayal, March no longer cares if he lives or dies.Catherine--now queen of Pitoria--must find a way to defeat the boy army, while also grappling with her own troubles: her secret demon smoke addiction, and unresolved tension with her former lover, Ambrose. Catherine seeks military support from Calidor by reaching out to her illegitimate cousin Edyon, who has been proclaimed heir to the Calidorian throne. But Edyon has almost no power as he's entangled in the unfamiliar machinations and manipulations of the royal court, finding that being the claimed son of a prince may be no easier than being a bastard.With Catherine, his love, now married off and moving on, and his brother and sister tortured and executed before him, Ambrose doesn't know what his role in this world is any more. He leads an expedition into the demon world, hoping to destroy the boy army's stores of demon smoke. In this underground world, he runs into Tash, whom everyone had believed dead. She has survived in this new world using magical abilities that, prior to now, only demons had.Aloysius will send his demon smoke-powered boy army to kill them all, if he can. But what nobody knows is that there is more to the smoke than meets the eye...
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More Details:
Author
Sally Green
Pages
480
Publisher
Penguin
Published Date
2020-08-25
ISBN
0425290298 9780425290293
Community ReviewsSee all
"The first book was very interesting to read at the start. Truly enjoyed it, but near the end of the second book and starting the third(this one) I just could not finish this. Way too much going on, I love the concept of seeing the POVs of the many different characters, however I didn’t feel connected to any of the characters. Once I saw that there were even more added characters I just had to stop. [SPOILER ALERT] when one of the characters died I had a little twinge of sadness, but really didn’t feel much. I wish we had more time with them to actually know who they are, but the scenes just kept changing and new characters added I just didn’t feel involved. There was a point where I even mixed up the characters stories; it just became confusing. It has potential and I definitely see where the author was going, but this just wasn’t for me. "