Raven Unveiled by Grace Draven – Review & Excerpt

Raven Unveiled by Grace Draven – Review & Excerpt

 

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Description:
Siora has been on the run for longer than she cares to remember, from her past and her gift. Born with the ability to see and speak to ghosts, she has heard their desperate pleas as an otherworldly predator stalks the dead amid the fertile killing fields of the collapsing Krael Empire. The creature’s power and reach are growing with every soul it consumes, but Siora is preoccupied with her own troubles: namely an assassin who has sworn an oath of vengeance against her.

Gharek of Cabast was once the right-hand man of the reviled empress but is now a wanted fugitive. Although his reasons for hunting Siora are viscerally personal, what Gharek can’t anticipate is that when he finally does find her, she will hold the key to saving his world, or what’s left of it. To make good on old debts and protect the vulnerable dead from a malevolent force, Gharek and Siora will both need to make an ally out of an enemy—and trust that will be enough to save each other.

 

 

Review:

Raven Unveiled by Grace Draven is the 3rd book in her The Fallen Empire series. Raven Unveiled is a slow built romance, but the story takes center stage; filled with violence, betrayal, battles, and sacrifices. We met both of our leading characters in the previous book, with Gharek, the Empress’s cat-paw, determined to find Siora, who he feels betrayed him and his daughter. Gharek being the Empress’s cat-paw committed terrible atrocities against others, but now that the Empress is dead, he is free, keeping his disguise not to let others recognize him. His daughter, Estrad, was born with no arms, and is considered an abomination; and he makes sure she is protected, while he searches for Siora.

Siora, our heroine, is wonderful, as she is caring, compassionate and always looking out for others; but she knows Gharek is looking for her, and is constantly trying to be a step ahead. Siora is a shade-speaker, who sees and talks to the dead; she fears she has other powers, and tries to ignore them.

Along the way, they are both captured by a General, who is determined to take over the lands once ruled by the Empress. With the threat of death, as well as concerned about the protection of his daughter, Gharek agrees to find what the General needs to defeat the enemy.  Soira and Gharek have to work together to find the device, as well as stop an evil creature destroying the trapped souls.  Slowly, both Gharek and Soira begin to come to terms with the past, as he also tries to tell her that she has more powers, that is not evil, but good to help them. I really enjoyed seeing Gharek and Siora begin to care about each other, as well as his redemption and forgiveness.

What follows is a heartbreaking, emotional story, with so much action, danger, twists and turns along the way. Raven Unveiled an excellently written fantasy, that had a bit of everything from great heroes, romance, and exciting throughout.  Raven Unveiled was very well written by Grace Draven. If you enjoy fantasy, I suggest you read this book.

Reviewed by Barb

Copy provided by Publisher

 

 

 

                                        Excerpt

Gharek held a small lamp aloft to illuminate the path ahead. He didn’t worry that the fragile light might be seen in the distance and alert someone. His mount’s hooves crushing sticks and brittle deadfall would accomplish the task long before the light did.

The music of insects and bird calls had been loud just before he crossed the tree line, a cacophony of whistles, rustles, and chirps. Those sounds died away the closer he rode to the ruins of the dead city until the silence itself held its breath and only the gloom shrouding the trees breathed. His amiable mare stopped suddenly then pranced backward, tossing her head and snorting. Gharek tapped his heels against her sides to coax her forward. She’d have none of it, fighting the bit in her mouth as she pivoted on her hooves to trot back the way they’d come.

Gharek reined her to a halt, considering whether it was wise to continue his scouting in another direction or make camp nearby and wait until morning to resume his hunt. He’d lose time with camping but trying to find anyone in this darkness while riding a spooked horse was an exercise in futility. Besides, he could make up the time in daylight. Siora was on foot, he on horseback. He’d cover far more ground in less time than she would, and the chance she’d outrun him if he spotted her was nonexistent.

He guided the mare to retrace her steps, and this time she readily obeyed the command, eager to put distance between them and the city that squatted like a pustule on the landscape. But she’d taken no more than a pair of steps when something wrapped icy fingers around Gharek’s spine and wrenched him backward. He flew off the saddle as if lassoed from behind and landed on his back. The ground beneath him vibrated from the beat of his mare’s hooves as she bolted past him into the labyrinth of trees.

He lay there for a moment, stunned and winded. The ice shard wedged against his backbone remained, though whatever had ripped him from horseback didn’t press him into the dirt. A few more breaths and he lurched to his feet, unsettled by his unusual clumsiness, alarmed by the violence of an invisible force that had so thoroughly unhorsed him. There’d been no trip rope to clothesline him, nor had he been riding fast when he fell. The lamp he held had fallen when he did, lost somewhere in the underbrush when its flickering light had guttered. Darkness hung thick enough to scoop with a spoon.

His muttered curses sounded loud to his ears as he peered into the sepulchral black, hoping he might spot the mare standing nearby or at least find a partially cleared path that led back to open pasture. He took a step only to suffer a hard clamp on his backbone, as if the icicle there had suddenly transformed into a shackle locked around his middle. Invisible tethers seized his arms and legs and he was jerked to one side and then the other as if by a drunken puppeteer with their hands on the strings.

Gharek staggered, struggling to keep his feet, struggling to free himself from the bonds that held him in an unbreakable grip that both dragged and yanked him in the direction of Midrigar’s walls. He careened through the dark, along a jagged path that propelled him into tree trunks before spinning him away to tear through the underbrush. He tried planting his feet in the dirt to no avail, his boots carving skid marks as he was pulled along like a cur on a leash. His palms left bloody smears on the bark of those trees he tried to grip for purchase and was wrenched away with little effort.

The iciness slithering down his spine spread in creeper tendrils throughout his body, wrapping around his lungs and heart, his liver, even his tongue so that his curses and snarls slowly ebbed away and his struggles waned. Speaking was an impossibility, breathing a challenge, and he was reduced to nothing more than a grunting, shambling mute driven inexorably toward an ancient city of the damned and a fate he could not know but feared with every part of his soul.

Excerpted from Raven Unveiled by Grace Draven Copyright © 2022 by Grace Draven. Excerpted by permission of Ace. All rights reserved.

 

 

 

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