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Kings and Assassins

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Controlled by an aristocracy whose depraved whims bow to neither law nor god, the kingdom of Antyre is under siege from the only man who can save it. He is Janus Ixion, the new Earl of Last, a man whose matchless fighting abilities and leadership strike terror in Antyre’s powerful noble houses.
For Janus is the illegitimate son who has returned from the brutal slums to reclaim his birthright, and will go to any lengths to become king and reverse his country’s decline. But with a conquering foreign prince sowing chaos throughout the kingdom, Janus must battle the terrifying power of Antyre’s forgotten god, one who has gifted Janus’s vengeful wife with mysterious and dangerous skills. As Antyre nears irrevocable collapse, Janus’s manipulations and all-consuming ambition will force him and his country to choose between the rule of resurgent gods, or a victor’s throne of ashes.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 2, 2009
      This dark and gruesome sequel to 2007's Maledicte
      compellingly illustrates the endless variety of human venality. Janus Ixion, former starving commoner and now the earl of Last, is fervently dedicated to bringing an industrial revolution to Antyre, a dreary, decadent fantasy realm. This goal pits him against his devious former tutor, Prince Ivor of Itarus, who schemes to become Antyre's king. When old demonic gods return to Antyre and possess Janus's wife, Psyke, and the witless orphaned boy-king Adiran, the political becomes inextricably mixed with the supernatural. Numerous grisly murders counterpoint the simmering sexual tensions underlying Janus's quest for his lost love, Maledicte. Robins's tapestry of lies, deception and violence is deftly woven but not for the fainthearted.

    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2009
      The sequel to Maledicte (2007) is another gripping, blood-soaked drama set in a decaying royal court haunted by what remains of the gods.
      Prince Ivor of Itarus has had the Antyrian King Aris assassinated, a bit too early to suit Janus, the king's bastard nephew, who has always intend ed to seize the throne —just not yet. Unfortunately, his wife Psyke believes Janus is culpable for the king 's death; however, her apparent descent into madness (actually, she 's become possessed by Haith, god of death and victory) gives her little credibility. Meanwhile, Aris 's nominal heir, the mentally limited Prince Adiran, appears to be gaining in intelligence, suggesting that he may also be possessed, but by Black-Winged Ani, fickle goddess of love and vengeance. Janus must employ the most ruthless of methods to protect his beloved country of Antyre from invasion by Itarus, civil unrest and the deadly schemes of the re-emergent gods, while guarding his own back from assassins, unreliable allies and treacherous courtiers. Robins deftly paints a unique and involving world peopled by complexly layered characters. Despite his many nefarious deeds and sheer bloody-minded opportunism, protagonist Janus retains an unshakeable core of integrity, and, as such, also keeps the reader 's sympathy.

      Recommended for those with an unflinching taste for the raw underside of court intrigue.

      (COPYRIGHT (2009) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2009
      The sequel to Maledicte (2007) is another gripping, blood-soaked drama set in a decaying royal court haunted by what remains of the gods.
      Prince Ivor of Itarus has had the Antyrian King Aris assassinated, a bit too early to suit Janus, the king's bastard nephew, who has always intend ed to seize the throne —just not yet. Unfortunately, his wife Psyke believes Janus is culpable for the king's death; however, her apparent descent into madness (actually, she's become possessed by Haith, god of death and victory) gives her little credibility. Meanwhile, Aris's nominal heir, the mentally limited Prince Adiran, appears to be gaining in intelligence, suggesting that he may also be possessed, but by Black-Winged Ani, fickle goddess of love and vengeance. Janus must employ the most ruthless of methods to protect his beloved country of Antyre from invasion by Itarus, civil unrest and the deadly schemes of the re-emergent gods, while guarding his own back from assassins, unreliable allies and treacherous courtiers. Robins deftly paints a unique and involving world peopled by complexly layered characters. Despite his many nefarious deeds and sheer bloody-minded opportunism, protagonist Janus retains an unshakeable core of integrity, and, as such, also keeps the reader's sympathy.

      Recommended for those with an unflinching taste for the raw underside of court intrigue.

      (COPYRIGHT (2009) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

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  • English

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