
The first boy disappeared on the day of his birth, on a night when the pale yellow moon of the nighttime sky turned red and bathed the heavens in the ghastly color of blood, on the same night the Kingdom of Cokyri abruptly ceased its merciless attack.
Now, as seventeen-year-old Princess Alera of Hytanica is besieged from all sides by suitors vying for the Throne, a teenage Cokyrian boy, Narian, is encountered within the walls of her Kingdom, a boy who will show Alera a world where women serve a purpose and not just a husband. As Narian helps Alera find her voice, she struggles against an arranged marriage that will shatter the life she has scarcely begun to live. And when Narian's shocking past is uncovered, and war with Cokyri looms once more, he must fight to defy a fate ordained at his birth.Across the land of Hytanica, under the shadow of the crimson moon, infant boys continued to vanish. Not until the blood had faded from the sky did the disappearances stop and the bodies of the murdered infants were found outside the gates of the city, a final word from the greatest enemy Hytanica had ever known. For the next sixteen years, peace reigned, but one mystery remained unsolved. The Cokyrians had abducted forty-nine newborns, but returned only forty-eight bodies.
Princess Alera has always known her destiny to be the heir of her father’s throne. The Queen in waiting to Hytanica pleases her father in stature and propriety and with his blessing will marry a suitable husband to rule in her stead. Alera, while Queen will have no power in decision making, nor will she ever be consulted in political and military reason, her role is to produce an heir and stand by the Kings side. Only one man in the kingdom measures up to her father’s standards and that man happens to make Alera’s skin crawl. Steldor, son of Hytanicas military Captain is confident in his position to marry Alera, he reeks of everything naïve girls fall week in the knees for, ridiculous good looks, charm and power. Alera sees through that exterior and finds Steldor to be conceited, arrogant and aloof, only making the day to marry him repulsive.
When a boy is found in the country who is soon discovered to be a boy kidnapped as an infant by the Cokyrians, life in the palace is turned upside down. Talk of betrayal is rumored and the mystery surrounding Narian only brings Alera closer to the legends and politics about the hated Cokyrians. Even though Alera is to marry Steldor and she is a Hytanican, she can’t stop the unwanted draw towards Narian, her shows her a world where women are valued, where women hold power and respect and shows her the first stirrings of true love. But Alera’s father won’t stand for it and nor will her guard’s and especially not Steldor who will fight for his honor and to everyone’s surprise his shockingly true desire for Alera.
The first thing I must say about this book, is how blown away I was by the authors young age. The talent is certainly there and Im looking forward to watching Kayla grow as a writer and keeping my eye on her budding career. The biggest strength in Kluvers writing was the development of Alera's character, where she starts off timid and a bit naive in her youth, she grows and develops into what was expected of a girl in that century. I was very pleasantly surprised to see Kluver present a fantasy type world within the historical boundaries of that world, she pushed the limits of acceptability with Alera in certain scenarios but at the same time did not far-fetch the outcomes. In Alera's day to day life, as a reader (and a woman) I felt emotions of entrapment and slavery, whereas our character felt duty and allegiance to her royal position, giving me such a great look into the mind frame of a woman in her circumstances. Even through her doubt and her heartbreak, Alera came to be unbelievably strong, something that I admire in a female character. Her point of view from a male dominated society gave the book layers upon layers of inner turmoil. For the secondary characters, Im hoping to see more development in the upcoming novels, Steldor and Narian need and deserve a lot of fleshing out, the love triangle was very clever and Im completely torn towards both men, seeing faults and qualities in both, but not really having a firm opinion on who would be best for Alera, the most obvious choice based on emotion only probably is not the best choice in the world that these characters live in......after the small shocker that ended the book, only Kluver knows what her characters are whispering and Im dying to find out what happens next.
Rating
Legacy can be enjoyed by teens and adults alike. I would say this is ok for mature middle school readers as well (think 8th grade) however the length may deter some. Contains: Violence, war, medieval culture, romance, mild sensuality (lots of kissing) death, gender roles in society and the life of royalty.

Sounds like a good book! Another really good one to read by a teen author is Prophecy of the Stones by Flavia Bujor. It's middle grade, but I loved it:) Great review!
ReplyDelete-Danna
Okay, after you mentioned it, I just had to go look up the author's age and WOW!
ReplyDeleteAmazing!
Yes, I'm definitely interested in reading this book. I think it will be fascinating to see how she mixed the fantasy with the historical. Alera sounds like the type of heroine that is a good role model.
You have made me very excited to read this book. Thanks T
Nice review, I keep meaning to get to this on NetGalley, and you've definitely made me bump it up the review list :)
ReplyDeleteThis sounds lovely. Oh and the cover looks beautiful. Thanks for the great review.
ReplyDeleteI honestly can't believe how young she was when she wrote this. It's both impressive and also makes me feel a little untalented that at 29 I could no more write a novel than fly:) I'm really interested in her characters, I definitely want to know more about them. Fabulous review Tina!
ReplyDeleteSounds excellent. I need to learn more about this writer.
ReplyDelete