JANUARY 2023 - AudioFile
Saskia Maarleveld sublimely narrates this highly anticipated return to the world of Elfhame. Suren, child queen of the Court of Teeth, fled to the human world to live in the woods, where she helps release humans from their bargains with the fae. Her mother, Lady Nore, has taken over the Ice Needle Citadel, and prince Oak of Elfhame needs Suren’s help to stop her. Maarleveld voices Suren in a gravelly voice, echoing her scream-strained vocal cords and feral lifestyle. Maarleveld’s opulent performance of Oak, the charming prince, fully embodies his confidence and easy manipulations, which make Suren unsure if she can trust the boy to whom she was once promised in marriage. Maarleveld suffuses her narration with intrigue and romance, pulling listeners along by their heartstrings. A.K.R. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine
From the Publisher
Praise for The Stolen Heir:
*"Flawlessly executed."—School Library Journal, Starred Review
JANUARY 2023 - AudioFile
Saskia Maarleveld sublimely narrates this highly anticipated return to the world of Elfhame. Suren, child queen of the Court of Teeth, fled to the human world to live in the woods, where she helps release humans from their bargains with the fae. Her mother, Lady Nore, has taken over the Ice Needle Citadel, and prince Oak of Elfhame needs Suren’s help to stop her. Maarleveld voices Suren in a gravelly voice, echoing her scream-strained vocal cords and feral lifestyle. Maarleveld’s opulent performance of Oak, the charming prince, fully embodies his confidence and easy manipulations, which make Suren unsure if she can trust the boy to whom she was once promised in marriage. Maarleveld suffuses her narration with intrigue and romance, pulling listeners along by their heartstrings. A.K.R. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine
Kirkus Reviews
2023-12-12
The first in a new duology building directly on Black’s The Folk of the Air series.
The Folk are often cruel, as Wren knows; raised human until her faerie parents returned for her and enspelled her adoptive human parents to fear her, she endured torment in the Court of Teeth before running away to live wild. When Prince Oak, who’s the heir to Elfhame and was once her friend, finds and recruits her to return to the Court of Teeth on a mission seeking resolution and maybe even revenge, Wren reluctantly goes along. A brief journey up the magical Eastern Seaboard, full of small personal moments and brilliantly imagined settings, is underpinned by the exploration of recovery from trauma and the question of what it means to have and be family. Wren finds trusting impossible, while Oak has his own emotional battles; Faerie is full of broken people (however nonhuman) whose pain engenders complex relationships, even as political and personal betrayals abound. This tale is too dependent on the events of The Queen of Nothing (2019) to be accessible to new readers, but returning fans will dive right in. Although this volume mostly focuses on positioning players for the next moves in the endless power struggle, a late-game twist promises higher personal and political stakes to come. The almost entirely nonmortal characters are wildly diverse in appearance.
A satisfying journey with a tantalizing finish. (map) (Fantasy. 14-18)