The Book: The Wicked King by Holly Black

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The main thing I enjoy about this series is the world that Holly Black has created. She’s often called the Queen of Faerie, and these books definitely show why, as the locations and creatures she describes are so fantastical. Much of it is based on folk tales, especially the various types of fae, but she puts her own twists on it to make the world of Elfhame magical and a little bit creepy – which I love!
Readers, I really liked this book. And it ended with an awesome cliffhanger/twist, so naturally I was hooked and eager to get my hands on The Wicked King as quickly as possible.
Five months after engineering a coup, human teen Jude is starting to feel the strain of secretly controlling King Cardan and running his Faerie kingdom. Jude’s self-loathing and anger at the traumatic events of her childhood (her Faerie “dad” killed her parents, and Faerie is not a particularly easy place even for the best-adjusted human) drive her ambition, which is tempered by her desire to make the world she loves and hates a little fairer. Much of the story revolves around plotting (the Queen of the Undersea wants the throne; Jude’s Faerie father wants power; Jude’s twin, Taryn, wants her Faerie betrothed by her side), but the underlying tension—sexual and political—between Jude and Cardan also takes some unexpected twists. Black’s writing is both contemporary and classic; her world is, at this point, intensely well-realized, so that some plot twists seem almost inevitable. Faerie is a strange place where immortal, multihued, multiformed denizens can’t lie but can twist everything; Jude—who can lie—is an outlier, and her first-person, present-tense narration reveals more than she would choose. With curly dark brown hair, Jude and Taryn are never identified by race in human terms.