Daughter of the Sun
Tales of Inthya, Book 2
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Narrated by:
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Brenda Scott Wlazlo
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Written by:
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Effie Calvin
About this listen
Orsina of Melidrie is a paladin of the Order of the Sun, sworn to drive out corruption and chaos wherever she finds it. She has been ordered to leave her home and travel around Vesolda in search of a great evil she is supposedly destined to destroy. But after two years of fighting monsters and demons and evil gods, she does not seem to be any closer to her goal - or ever returning home.
Aelia is the Goddess of Caprice, the personification of poor decision-making. The Order of the Sun has classified her as a chaos goddess, meaning that her worship has been outlawed. During a run-in with Orsina, she is trapped in a mortal body, rendering her unable to leave Inthya.
Aelia is found by Orsina again, but this time Orsina does not recognize her in her new body. So Aelia pretends to be a mortal woman who is fleeing an abusive family. Aelia plans to use Orsina as protection as she hunts down the magical relic that will free her from her mortal body.
As Aelia and Orsina grow closer to one another, Aelia wrestles with her own desire to tell Orsina the truth about who she is, and her fear that Orsina will turn on her if she does. But the decision might not be hers after all, because their actions have not gone unnoticed by Aelia’s siblings.
©2018 Effie Calvin (P)2019 NineStar Press, LLCWhat listeners say about Daughter of the Sun
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Kindle Customer
- 2021-10-06
Easily one of my favorite audio book
Absolutely fantastic story with great characters, interesting world building and a fantastic ending segment. I loved how much depth there was to the characters and their thoughts.
Everything made sense, without any plotholes I could see. It avoids the usual "overpowered protagonists" you so often see in fantasy stories. Orsina is possibly my favorite protagonist of all time.
The narration was also perfect; she has a very pleasing voice and every character was immediately recognizable by voice alone. Overall, I'm extremely happy with this book and I'm looking forward to dive in the next one.
Note that this book is mostly standalone: while it's in the same world as the first book, it is in a different region with a completely different cast. The events from the first book are occasionaly referenced and it gives a different perspective of some of the same gods, but this book can easily stand on its own.
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