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The Star-Touched Queen Kindle Edition

4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars 1,167 ratings

Praise for The Star-Touched Queen:
New York Times Bestseller
#9 on the Summer 2016 Kids' Indie Next List
An Amazon Best Book of the Month
A Goodreads Best Book of the Month

Fate and fortune. Power and passion. What does it take to be the queen of a kingdom when you're only seventeen?
Maya is cursed. With a horoscope that promises a marriage of Death and Destruction, she has earned only the scorn and fear of her father's kingdom. Content to follow more scholarly pursuits, her whole world is torn apart when her father, the Raja, arranges a wedding of political convenience to quell outside rebellions. Soon Maya becomes the queen of Akaran and wife of Amar. Neither roles are what she expected: As Akaran's queen, she finds her voice and power. As Amar's wife, she finds something else entirely: Compassion. Protection. Desire...
But Akaran has its own secrets -- thousands of locked doors, gardens of glass, and a tree that bears memories instead of fruit. Soon, Maya suspects her life is in danger. Yet who, besides her husband, can she trust? With the fate of the human and Otherworldly realms hanging in the balance, Maya must unravel an ancient mystery that spans reincarnated lives to save those she loves the most. . .including herself.
A lush and vivid story that is steeped in Indian folklore and mythology. The Star-touched Queen is a novel that no reader will soon forget.

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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Gr 9 Up-Born with a horoscope that predicts a marriage of death and destruction, Maya is an outcast in her father's kingdom, Bharata. When Amar's political machinations go horribly wrong, Maya finds herself married to him and queen of Akaran-a mysterious place filled with secrets and magic. Amar offers Maya the chance to rule at his side and become more than Bharata ever would have allowed. All he asks in return is her patience and trust, which soon prove more than she can give. Her search for answers will lead her across worlds and through her own fragmented memories to discover surprising truths about her husband's kingdom and herself. Maya is refreshingly unapologetic about her ambitions and her desire for independence. Although her distrust and doubts lead to the main conflict of the story, she is quick to own those mistakes and works to correct them even when it might be to her detriment. Chokshi's debut fantasy is filled with vivid and unexpected imagery as Maya discovers the wonders and dangers found in her new home in the Otherworld. Well-researched figures from Hindu folklore and mythology, astonishing creatures, and expressive characters further complement the story. A setting drawn from ancient India, romance with feminist sensibilities, and a unique magic system reminiscent of Laini Taylor's Daughter of Smoke and Bone (Little, Brown, 2011) make this a novel sure to appeal to fans of Renée Ahdieh's The Wrath and the Dawn (Putnam, 2015). VERDICT A stunning debut filled with lush writing, smart characters, and a mysterious plot that provides as many twists as it does swoons.-Emma Carbone, Brooklyn Public Libraryα(c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Review

Praise for The Star-Touched Queen:
New York Times Bestseller
#9 on the Summer 2016 Kids' Indie Next List
A Goodreads Best Book of the Month

“Chokshi's prose is captivating, and the pages come alive …. Maya is a strong heroine, and while there is romance, an emphasis on familial love adds another level of richness to a folkloric fantasy about sacrifice, self-discovery, and making your own destiny.” ―
Publishers Weekly, starred review

“Richly imagined, deeply mythic, filled with lovely language… this is an author to watch” ―
Kirkus Reviews

"Magic is woven into every word of the STAR-TOUCHED QUEEN. Vibrantly imaginative and gracefully written, I was spellbound from the first line. A dazzling, sensuous feast of world-building, romance, and mythology." ―
Sarah J. Maas, New York Times Bestselling author of the Throne of Glass series.

"Roshani Chokshi has crafted a bewitching tale with a setting so vivid and unique, I wished I could step right through the pages." ―
Amy Ewing, New York Times Bestselling Author of The Jewel

"Chokshi's storytelling glimmers like magic on every page-a novel meant to be savored." ―
Cindy Pon, author of Serpentine and Silver Phoenix

"A luscious, bloodthirsty fairy tale with all the romance, magic, and gorgeous mythology I could ask for ―
Tessa Gratton, author of Blood Magic and The United States of Asgard series

"Gorgeously poetic writing gives vibrant, sensuous life to the worlds of THE STAR-TOUCHED QUEEN." ―
Kate Elliott, of Court of Fives

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B016ICX852
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ St. Martin's Griffin (April 26, 2016)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ April 26, 2016
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 3970 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 353 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars 1,167 ratings

About the author

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Roshani Chokshi
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Roshani Chokshi is the author of commercial and critically acclaimed books for middle grade and young adult readers that draws on world mythology and folklore. Her work has been nominated for the Locus and Nebula awards, and has frequently appeared on Best of The Year lists from Barnes and Noble, Forbes, Buzzfeed and more. Her New York Times bestselling series includes The Star-Touched Queen duology, The Gilded Wolves, and Aru Shah and The End of Time, which was recently optioned for film by Paramount Pictures.

Customer reviews

4.1 out of 5 stars
1,167 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the story engaging, captivating, and spellbinding. They praise the writing as poetic perfection. Readers also appreciate the beautiful imagery and world-building. Opinions are mixed on the character development, with some finding them compelling and strong, while others say they're poorly developed.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

70 customers mention "Story quality"51 positive19 negative

Customers find the story engaging, captivating, spellbinding, and lovely. They describe it as an amazing adventure with great twists. Readers also mention the plot is timeless yet new.

"...wisdom in the warnings of this novel make it valuable, the romance make it promising; every hopeful romantic dreams of a love like Maya and Amar’s:..." Read more

"...The narrative is lovely, too. I really rooted for Maya. As a character she is ambitious and she is suspicious...." Read more

"...I really enjoyed the writing style and exposure to Indian mythology, but unfortunately other parts of the book fell flat for me...." Read more

"...The plot does get a bit complicated at times but I never found it hard to follow and it moves along at steady pace...." Read more

69 customers mention "Writing quality"60 positive9 negative

Customers find the writing quality of the book to be poetic and beautiful. They appreciate the vivid details and spellbinding imagery. Readers also mention that the synopsis sounds incredible, but it's the cover that really draws them in.

"...The character Mayavati is relatable and a trustworthy narrator, constantly checking herself and her opinions, wondering where the boundary between..." Read more

"...Hers sings; it’s lyrical. You can get lost in the words.The structure of the book, too, is so clever once you know the story. *..." Read more

"...I started reading this as soon as I could. I really enjoyed the writing style and exposure to Indian mythology, but unfortunately other parts of the..." Read more

"...and death, fate and love—Roshani Chokshi enchants with a beautifully written narrative of one girl’s quest for freedom and true love...." Read more

48 customers mention "Visual quality"46 positive2 negative

Customers find the story rife with beautiful, ornate language and vivid imagery. They describe the book as truly unique, original, and engaging. Readers also appreciate the unexpected visual metaphors.

"...There is some religious element to the novel, with references to Hindu religious myths and saturated with an impressive amount of Hindi vocabulary...." Read more

"...She has a wonderful way with unexpected visual metaphors that surprise and delight me:..." Read more

"...Although the overall concept of the book is unique, I didn’t find many other aspects of the book particularly refreshing...." Read more

"...Once in Akaran, her home is both majestic and chillingly barren...." Read more

15 customers mention "World building"15 positive0 negative

Customers find the world-building magnificent, complex, and impactful. They say the book encourages deep thinking and a tale brimming with magic, wonder, and secret worlds. Readers also mention the world is magical but full of secrets.

"...“everything is a matter of interpretation” (112) the book promotes thoughtful decision making...." Read more

"...I really rooted for Maya. As a character she is ambitious and she is suspicious...." Read more

"...The world just teemed with possibility. The Star-Touched Queen is an impressive, spellbinding debut which is sure to set the fantasy readership..." Read more

"...reminded me a bit of Cruel Beauty by Rosamund Hodge; the very complex world building required of both books in incredible...." Read more

26 customers mention "Character development"17 positive9 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the character development in the book. Some mention the characters are compelling and strong, while others say they're poorly developed and the heroine is a little petulant.

"...Maya is such a strong character. She has such agency throughout...." Read more

"...However, she did have good character development over the course of the book, which I appreciated...." Read more

"...It made me feel nothing for the characters, and I'm honestly surprised I made it to the second half.Luckily, I did...." Read more

"...I loved her writing, loved the secrets and characters… in fact, I would have loved to see even deeper character explorations...." Read more

9 customers mention "Emotional content"6 positive3 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the emotional content of the book. Some mention it's an emotional rollercoaster, while others say it's full of metaphors and tropes.

"...third or so of the book ends up being a much more interpretable, sympathetic, and interesting character than Nritti...." Read more

"...No more sighing over life's woes, but exiting action to face evils...." Read more

"...Some parts of the book that didn’t appeal to me as much were the prevalence of tropes, confusing explanations, and an eye-rolling romance...." Read more

"...Cursed and ostracized, Maya is at once charming and heartbreaking...." Read more

8 customers mention "Pacing"3 positive5 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book. Some mention it's breakneck, while others say it drags for 3 to 4 pages.

"...'s backstory is told only near the end of the book and everything felt rushed by that point...." Read more

"...at times but I never found it hard to follow and it moves along at steady pace...." Read more

"...It was masterfully poetic. However, the first 50% of this book was so slow and boring...." Read more

"Hah I would say a heavy writing which drags for 3 to 4 pages while the entire content can be fitted beautifully in 1 page...." Read more

7 customers mention "Enjoyment"3 positive4 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the book. Some say it's a fun adventure with great settings. Others say the book is slow and boring, completely ruining their enjoyment.

"...I loved the beginning of the book, but then my enjoyment passed after a certain point...." Read more

"...All great settings for a fun, fast-paced read.I like the flavor of folk lore and I had hoped to find that here...." Read more

"...However, the first 50% of this book was so slow and boring...." Read more

"...It was a great one day read with a fun adventure, and I can't wait to get my hands on more of Roshani's work!" Read more

magical, enchanting, beautiful tale with descriptive flowery writing and unique world building.
5 out of 5 stars
magical, enchanting, beautiful tale with descriptive flowery writing and unique world building.
The star Touched Queen was mythical fantasy romance, an Indian retelling of Hades and Persephone, a story of Maya and Amar full of mysteries, love and betrayal, death and reincarnation, (and as blurb says) fate and fortune, passion and power.characters-Maya – it took some time for me getting to know her. She was a kind of character whom you won’t like instantly, ask patience, and will grow on you by the end of the book. Yeah, she was complex, but I like her will to live to escape from the evil harem wives and gilded cages of her father’s kingdom that wanted her dead. She was smart, had conscience and political mind. Her ability to play with riddle was most amusing. I was glad she got a chance to run away but her nativity led her to believe lies and deception and had to go through the guilt trip. Her development was slow but the way she handled everything in second part was brilliant. I loved the way she learned from her mistakes and clung to hope. She was true hero of the book.Amar – As soon as he came into story, I loved him. Everything about him was enticing. His kingdom, his secretes, his love and trust.. Oh, I so badly wished to grab that hood and uncover his face and look at those warm yet powerful eyes just like Maya. He was heart throbbing king who will drag the reader into his mesmerizing words. I admired him for his ways of showing his love for Maya. Who doesn’t like when a boy twist stars together and says, ‘A constellations to wear in your hair’!Ever heard someone say they liked pishacha, a flesh eating demon? Well, I did in this book. Kamala was creepy and disgusting pishacha in form of horse, a dead without soul, but she made book even more interesting. She was funny, made me smile and I liked the way she helped Maya in second part.what I liked-The book was first person narrative with beautiful flowery descriptive writing, mesmerizing first lines, and gripping end paragraph of each chapters. The beginning of the book was tense gave the overview of kingdom of Bharat, Maya’s father- the Raja, cunning harem wives and Maya’s curse and her worst horoscope. It intrigued me to know more about Maya’s story- where her horoscope would lead, if she would be saved from hellish treatment of harem wives and whether her horoscope would come true or was that just rumors.As the story progressed it took the readers from the garden and sanctum of Bharat to the lands of Otherworld and enchanting palace of Akaran with thousands door and full of secrets. I was eager to find out who Amar was, what he was hiding, what the voices in the hall were and what its intentions was. All these mysteries were enchanting enough to entangle me with the story. I loved the book more and more as the secrets were unraveled.World building, tales and mysteries were the heart of the book. Akaran, kingdom between human world and Otherworld, a difficult task of balancing the borders of otherworld and human world, of deciding fate of people, that chapter describing the throne room and tapestry of fate was mind-blowing and that’s just the small part there was more. I even loved the story of antagonist and how antagonist turned from good to bad and mother Dhina’s repentance. . Everything was perfectly balanced and beautifully written.Book gave a different perspective on fate, death, darkness and deeper insight on love- importance of patience, trust and being equal in relationship. It was about believing in love, power within yourself, hope, and finding love again.Climax and end was exciting and I loved the way things settled at the end. I can’t wait to read next book in series.Overall, it was magical, enchanting, beautiful tale with descriptive flowery writing and unique world building. I recommend it to YA fantasy lover.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on July 18, 2016
read the full review here: [...]

Roshani Chokshi’s debut novel The Star-Touched Queen is an adventure, taking the reader through far-away otherworldly lands on a journey of self-reflection and self-discovery. Driven to enchanted bazaars and palaces of another time, racing on horseback across barren fields and wild jungles, the story engulfs the reader, allowing readers to become one with the character Mayavati as she bites into fairy fruits of sapphires and pearls and wears a crown of stars in her hair.

Told in horoscopes and embedded in myth, this story captivates and entrances the reader, lulling them with dreamlike images of golden honeycomb archives and gem-laden palace hallways, inviting readers into a world of fantasy, fairytale, lore and beauty. Spoken in riddles, the novel itself encourages deep thinking. Reminding us that “everything is a matter of interpretation” (112) the book promotes thoughtful decision making. Urging readers to practice “a different way of seeing” (143). But reader beware: The Star-Touched Queen bears virtue and valor, but also loses herself to impulsivity and falls victim to rumor. Like any other mortal, Maya must overcome her past in order to triumph in her future. Following her trials the reader learns from her mistakes, understanding as she does the importance of logic, reasoning, and fairness. Her lover Amar helps her in (re)discovering herself, gently encouraging her strengths and challenging her weaknesses, while simultaneously doing his best to protect her from her those who might try and ruin her.

The character Mayavati is relatable and a trustworthy narrator, constantly checking herself and her opinions, wondering where the boundary between truth and lies resides, what is reality and illusion. The reader gets lost and becomes one with Maya, a simple soul trying her hardest to do the right thing and make the right decisions.

“…the play of interpretation that turned something terrifying and iron-clad into something that could be conqured.” (143)

The novel also makes a statement on the impermanence of memory. The memory tree that keeps Maya’s memories in mirrors and flames is mutable, changing and unreliable. Piece-meal. “Memory is a riddled thing” (112).

The story weaves a tapestry of lessons, reminding us of qualities to aspire to – wisdom and patience; warning against the follies in life, selfishness, arrogance and cowardice. Chokshi imparts these lessons through clever storytelling, each character representing what we should aspire to be like or should check ourselves of. Sage characters such as Maya’s father, the good king, remind us to be wise and kind, diplomatic, while in opposition stand the dark characters: “Where the Raja favored wisdom, Skanda favored wealth” (25). Skyanda, the selfish king, and Nirriti, the vain and hungry sister represent negative qualities while Amar and Maya’s father represent positive traits.

The wisdom in the warnings of this novel make it valuable, the romance make it promising; every hopeful romantic dreams of a love like Maya and Amar’s: a patient love that stretches the eons, a borderless love that connects constellations, an endless love that lasts an eternity.

There is some religious element to the novel, with references to Hindu religious myths and saturated with an impressive amount of Hindi vocabulary. Though there is a glossary in the back of the book, it is bare-bones skeletal and could be improved upon: many of the italicized words were not included in the glossary and would need to be looked up by many readers.

A beautifully written book, imbued with evocative imagery and riddled language, The Star-Touched Queen holds readers mysteriously enchanted from beginning to end.
Reviewed in the United States on July 3, 2016
NOTES ON DIVERSITY:
This is a book about a woman of color by a woman of color. The cast is all people of color--specifically Indian people. The fantastic creatures that appear come from Indian folklore and mythology.

In many ways, the diversity stops there. No queer characters appear in the book. There is no discussion of disability. Class does not come to the fore.1 Readers longing for an exploration of these themes may want to look elsewhere.

REVIEW:
Mayavati was born with bad luck. Her horoscope states that her marriage will join her to death, devastation and destruction. In the land of her birth, Bharata, a bad horoscope taints a person.

Maya is shunned by the wives and daughters of the harem, left to her own devices, until fate moves her to a place where her death can be used as a political tool. But she does not die. She finds herself married to a mysterious king of a mysterious land--Akaran, where creatures of myth and legend roam. Amar, her new husband, tells her she has powers she never dreamed of, and that he can teach her, but only if she doesn’t ask too many questions, and only if she doesn’t explore the new palace. But, of course Maya’s curiosity gets the better of her.

First, I have to say that Chokshi’s writing is gorgeous. I’ve read her short stories, so I knew that going in. She has a wonderful way with unexpected visual metaphors that surprise and delight me:

"This was the court of Bharata, a city like a bone spur -- tacked on like an afterthought."

Or:

"A sound spidered through the floor."

The book is beautifully written, a real pleasure to read. Chokshi is the kind of stylist I am jealous of as a fellow writer as I know my own writing is much more prosaic than hers. Hers sings; it’s lyrical. You can get lost in the words.

The structure of the book, too, is so clever once you know the story. *Of course* Maya told all of those stories to Gauri!2 *Of course* the details she made up proved to be true when she makes it to the Night Market! I REALLY WANT TO TELL YOU THINGS RIGHT NOW THAT ARE SPOILERS but I will not, so please read the book so we can discuss, ok?

The narrative is lovely, too. I really rooted for Maya. As a character she is ambitious and she is suspicious. She sneaks into the rafters of her father’s diplomatic councils and learns about warcraft and politics. She yearns for power. She knows she is smart, and she wants to use her sharp and cutting mind for *something* for *anything*. It was not surprising to me that when presented with the opportunity her new husband, Amar, represents that she would take it. She may be attracted to him at the outset, and grateful for his rescue, but she does not immediately fall in love with him. I loved this tension within her, the suspicion of him (she openly says she does not trust him to him) and this desire for power.

Maya is such a strong character. She has such agency throughout. Chokshi draws her as a complete human being, and allows her to both rise to full glorious potential and to give in to her weaknesses. She falters. She learns from her mistakes. One of her mistakes is very dire, indeed, and she does what she needs to, sacrifices what she has to, to make things right. Maya is a better, more mature version of herself by the end of the book. Not a different person--still herself, still recognizably herself, but grown up. The character work in THE STAR-TOUCHED QUEEN when it comes to Maya is truly excellent. The characterization of some of the minor characters--Kamala and Gauri, especially--was also very strong.

I wish the characterization of the other two main leads, Amar and Nritti, were as strong. Amar remains throughout a besotted cypher. We know he loves her, and that he has secrets, and that’s about it in terms of his character development. Honestly, in terms of plot, he doesn’t have much else to do, but there could have been a great deal more shading here to differentiate him from the other Brooding But Secretly Very Loving Love Interests I’ve read.

Nritti is a much more interesting case. She is the book’s main antagonist, and her role in the plot and in Maya’s life3 is a complicated one. They were friends, until they weren’t, and Maya only half-remembers a shadow of a feeling of trust in Nritti. Until Nritti’s backstory is revealed, it’s key that her characterization is very strong--that the reader feel that she is trustworthy, that we have a strong connection to her, too, stronger to her, perhaps, than to Amar because her role in the story is not so well telegraphed by narrative convention as Amar’s is. But she winds up ambiguous. And then she winds up duplicitous. And as a character, for me, she wound up a hollow, strange mess of wasted potential.

Nritti, also, was highlights worrisome issue in that there was an underlying element of femme...suspicion? in the book. It seemed as if the more feminine a female character was, the less Maya could trust that character (from childhood, an example would be the harem wives who exclude her). Gauri, her sister, grows into a soldier. Kamala, a female-identified flesh-eating horse demon that appears in the last third or so of the book ends up being a much more interpretable, sympathetic, and interesting character than Nritti. Kamala has more shading and depth. So it isn’t that Chokshi didn’t know how to write her non-human characters, or characters that are at first glance repugnant. It’s that Nritti never quite formed. I think this is an Unfortunate Unintended Consequence, but that doesn’t mean it didn’t happen in the text.

Still, I would recommend this book. The weaknesses with Amar and Nritti are, to me, quite well balanced by the strength of Maya herself, and by the beauty of the writing. I very much enjoyed this book, and I am excited to see what Chokshi does with the next book.

__________
1: Arguably there is a glancing blow at class made in the book when Maya returns to Bharata as a sahdvi. I don’t count this, personally, as a discussion of class since she experiences her role as a sahdvi as a costume/disguise. She never claims the status fully. This is a book about a princess. Maya is a princess who was abused emotionally and psychologically, yes, but she was first a princess and then a queen, and her social position and worldview is different throughout the book than a peasant or a pauper.

2: GAURI!!!! I am very excited that the companion novel, A CROWN OF WISHES, is all about her.

3: Technically, in Maya’s *lives* since Nritti knew Maya in a previous incarnation, too.
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Saloni Tiwari
5.0 out of 5 stars Loved it!!
Reviewed in India on March 9, 2021
O my god!!! This book is soo great. I read it in a day. Everything was so perfect from the characters to the storyline. I totally fell in love with the Maya and Amar and was constantly rooting for them but the only problem was that sometimes the description of the places was somewhat confusing. Apart from that everything was perfect.
Cliente Amazon
4.0 out of 5 stars ADORE IT !
Reviewed in Brazil on February 18, 2017
4.5
I loved the mythology and the poetic and magical way of writing by roshani, but I feel that something is missing in order to reach five stars ... or maybe after reading more books I simply became more critical
Joanne
5.0 out of 5 stars Gorgeous writing
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 12, 2016
Well this book certainly demands to be read in a couple of sittings - I couldn't put it down! The writing is absolutely gorgeous and while the story was a bit confusing to follow, the descriptions and magic made up for it. Maya is cursed but manages to escape a terrible fate when the mysterious Amar shows up. Soon she is learning about a whole new side to life and becomes a Queen herself, however doubt creeps in and that will be her downfall.

As Maya's world is taken from her, she must find a way to get back her life and protect the world from evil. At no point was I bored - I was racing through the chapters to find out what happens! It's a truly beautifully written book and I can't wait for the sequel.
Ceres Books World
5.0 out of 5 stars Une histoire merveilleuse se déroulant en Inde avec un héroine forte et indépendante.
Reviewed in France on March 12, 2017
J'ai adoré ce livre, que ce soit les personnages, l'intrigue et le lieu. Maya est une personne très forte qui malgré le fait que toutes les femmes du harem la déteste sait encore prendre des décisions par elle même qui changeront sa vie à tout jamais.
Elle va accepter d'épouser un homme qu'elle connait depuis à peine une minute afin de protéger le royaume de son père, l'attraction qu'ils éprouvent l'un pour l'autre est magique.
Le royaume dont elle est désormais reine est totalement différent de ce qu'elle attendait et elle devra découvrir les secrets que lui cache sa nouvelle maison mais aussi son nouveau mari.
Listwriter
4.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful prose
Reviewed in Germany on January 5, 2017
I cannot stress enough how stunning, how lyrical, how rich in imagery the writing in The Star-Touched Queen is. I was completely floored by its beauty. The world was fascinating, and the side character Kamala was great fun. Beyond that, I would have liked to see a quicker pace, and I wanted to feel closer to Maya. I recommend this The Star-Touched Queen if you are looking for beautiful prose and descriptions.

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