Citadel of the Sky (Thrones of the Firstborn Book 1), by Chrysoula Tzavelas
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Citadel of the Sky (Thrones of the Firstborn Book 1), by Chrysoula Tzavelas

Ebook PDF Online Citadel of the Sky (Thrones of the Firstborn Book 1), by Chrysoula Tzavelas
A Dark Lord is rising. Again. But hey, that's what the royal family is for, right? Kicking butt in nice dresses: a new epic tradition. Her (not very) Serene Highness Princess Tiana tries her best not to think about the dark lords ravaging her country or how the magic in her bloodline makes her family go mad. The descendant of a legendary hero, she prefers bringing the myths of old to life on the theater stage, not on the battlefield. Then a rash of suspicious deaths strikes the Regents—trusted advisors, friends, and guides to her troubled royal family—and the Noble’s Council tries to cover it all up. Tiana is determined to get to the bottom of the murders and the conspiracy, even if that means making a dangerous pact with a telepathic demon trapped in a magical sword. But he may just be the edge she needs to save the people she loves. Cursed sword in hand, Tiana and her friends prepare to face the encroaching darkness—and the ultimate truth about her and her family.
Citadel of the Sky (Thrones of the Firstborn Book 1), by Chrysoula Tzavelas - Amazon Sales Rank: #113571 in eBooks
- Published on: 2015-05-15
- Released on: 2015-05-15
- Format: Kindle eBook
Citadel of the Sky (Thrones of the Firstborn Book 1), by Chrysoula Tzavelas
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Most helpful customer reviews
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful. The only thing I disliked about it is that it ends on a cliffhanger By Madeline Spencer I found this book through Kickstarter, having no previous knowledge of the author's work, and I was hooked as soon as I read the preview. I backed the Kickstarter immediately and spent days wondering what happened next while I waited for the Kickstarter to end and my purchase to be filled. This book has a gripping, constantly evolving plot with a tinge of horror, set in a world with unique and complex systems of religion, politics and magic-- all of which seem to be on the verge of unravelling. The only thing I disliked about it is that it ends on a cliffhanger. (The sequel is coming out soon, though.)I'm surprised to see the royal family's magic described as "making them go mad" in the blurb, because that makes this book sound like every other story that uses a sort of generic "madness" as a trope, when it's the opposite. No one "goes mad" in this book. The "madness" isn't used as a threat-- there's no pretense that the characters are Normal and Sane now, but might Go Mad in some irrevocable, fate-worse-than-death way if they do the wrong thing. None of that. This is a book in which a bunch of people who are mentally ill *now*, already, do their best to cope and also rule a country, solve mysteries, and fight off invading armies.I cannot say strongly enough how impressed I am with the balance this book maintains in portraying the characters who have the royal blood, and thus the royal magic and the royal "madness". Too often, disabilities in fiction are either completely tragic-- they make a person incapable of doing anything worthwhile, ever-- or they exist in theory but don't really affect the characters in a significant way. This book balances the significant difficult effects of the royal "madness" with the still significant abilities of the royals to manage not only their own lives but the whole kingdom. The royals' experiences are sometimes genuinely scary, and they sometimes struggle with themselves and wish some of their symptoms would go away, but they are also all well-developed characters with their own agency. They make their own choices. They work around their symptoms and live their lives as best they can.Among the different members of the royal family we see many different attitudes toward mental illness and many different ways of coping. The main character, Tiana, resents being treated as fragile and fears that people will be afraid of her. She tries to hide her symptoms and act as "normal" as possible, especially around strangers, but her desire to be normal and accepted is at odds with her curiosity and impulsiveness. Kiar, Tiana's cousin, is introverted and closed-off. She maintains outward self-control and poise by avoiding other people and her own emotions, while inside she's filled with self-doubt. King Shonathan, Tiana's father, drifts through life trying to avoid thinking about painful memories. Shanasee, another cousin, has the greatest magical power of any member of the royal family currently alive, but refuses to use her abilities. She played a large part in ending the last magical threat to the kingdom, and was horrified by the results of her actions.The Regents, mentioned in the blurb, exist in the confusing territory between friend, relative, and caregiver. They grow up alongside the members of the royal family, but their job is to help the royals control their powers and stay anchored in reality, and the Regents as a group have their own political power and agenda which is sometimes different from that of the royal family. This creates a lot of mixed feelings on both sides. Kiar doesn't have a regent and feels that having one would be admitting to weakness; Tiana cares deeply for her regent, Lisette, but also sometimes resents Lisette's kindness and finds it condescending.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful. an intriguing mix of royalty, politics, history, conspiracy and suspicion By Charlie Anderson Citadel of the Sky is an intriguing mix of royalty, politics, history, conspiracy and suspicion. It also has an immense fantasy aspect.Despite having these wonderful elements, I struggled getting started. The author could have done a better job front-loading readers with the basics of Tiana’s world, the phantasmagory and the creatures. All of the characters were quickly thrown at readers, and for a while it was hard to make the connections between them. I discovered that there was a characters list and a family tree in the back of the book. It would have helped me tremendously if I’d seen it before I started reading.However, don’t be fooled. The plot is strong and filled with imagination. Tzavelas definitely put creativity to the test, and the action builds and then hits a crescendo and becomes very fast-paced.The characters are what make the story worthwhile. They are interesting, complex, and for a royal family in the midst of troubled times, resilient. The royal family (the Blood) are blessed with magic, but a magic that leads to madness. It is all very psychological and readers get to see this first-hand. The characters work together to protect the Blood and to discover the inconsistencies in which they all grew up knowing as truth.There is a fairly wide cast of characters, and the POV shifts between Tiana and Kiar. Like the rest of the royal family members and attendants, they each have a role throughout the book. I feel that those who were prominently featured will have bigger roles in the following installments. I enjoyed the deviation from the female character trope of strength and perfection in order for them to be interesting. Each female character has her own set of flaws, and these anomalies are what makes each one her own person and not a hazy, glossed over character in the background.Tiana is the main character of the novel, but she is by far not the main focus. She is a young woman who resents being seen and treated as fragile, and she tries to act normal. Her counterpart, Kiar, is a very introverted character. On the exterior she is poised and in control, of course by doing those introverted things such as avoiding others and emotions, but on the inside she is consumed with self-doubt.Tiana’s father, King Shonathan, just kind of drifts along throughout life trying to avoid any painful memories. Another royal cousin, Shanasee, has the greatest magical power of any of the royals. Despite having the most intense and powerful magic, Shanasee refuses to use it due to the horrific results of her actions while trying to end the previous magical threat to their kingdom.The Regents are another complexity within the book and royal clan. They are in a strange area of gray, where they are not royal, they are not court attendants or followers, and they are not commoners. Instead, the Regents substantiate the royals as friend and relative. They also fall along the lines of a caregiver in many ways. Those selected as Regents grew up alongside the royals and they serve to help the royals control their magic.The middle of the book is where I was hooked – particularly Tiana’s budding relationship with the magical sword, Jinriki, sent to protect and teach Tiana. It can read Tiana’s mind, her thoughts, and also respond in kind. They get off to a rocky start, but their banter is crafted well and quite a draw.The ending fell slightly flat for me. Personally, I don’t typically like cliffhangers, and the book closed on a major cliffhanger that just wasn’t satisfying. I wanted things to be a little bit more clearly defined, but this makes me confident that the second installment will start off with a bang.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. thoughts on citadel of the sky By hello-booklover OVerall enjoyed the book and look forward to the next. The ending just wow. So yeah wow that was wow and crazy and really takes the breath away. At first there was confusion for me trying to follow the storyline. The world and everyone wasn’t really explained in the beginning so you were just thrown into the pond head first no background.As you go further into the story the characters draw you in. Tiana although at times is a brat she is plucky and brave while Kiar is quiet but strong in her own way. These are the two POV’s we get throughout the book. And it is a interesting intriguing book.Once in the book will enthrall you with its original concept of Royal blood being magic users but that leading to their madness and on top of that they have someone wanting revenge from years old. This really brings you into the spider web of the story and keeps you there dangling to see what will unfold next. Between the Pendant, the blade, Twist, the blythers it really is alot of twist and turns.You see the angst, the danger all be drawn out for the characters and it’s like a train wreck you see it happening and want to warn about it but dang it you want to let it be drawn out to so you can see what will happen.For me Kiar and Twist were my favorites. Its the quiet strength of Kiar and the wisdom of Twist that capture me.The story is intriguing and as the world unfolds and the battle ensues it draws you in and doesn’t let go as you get the joy of watching Kiar and Tiana come into their own and fight for what is right.
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Citadel of the Sky (Thrones of the Firstborn Book 1), by Chrysoula Tzavelas
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Citadel of the Sky (Thrones of the Firstborn Book 1), by Chrysoula Tzavelas