House of
Eclipse
by Casey L. Bond
History
tells a tale of two lovers, Sol the sun and Lumos the moon who broke apart and formed
a world divided. One ruled by Sol, Helios and one governed by Lumos, Lumina. But both of halves of this great earth are dying
for a world without both the sun and moon to shine down upon it will surely
perish.
For each
divide there is a powerful being that rules, in Helios it is Aten, a man filled
with hunger for power, who pits his three daughters, each from a different mother,
against each other. But reserves his greatest hatred for his youngest daughter
Noor. Lumos has chosen a new Lumin, Caelum, the earthly ruler of Lumina, who sees
a means to save both worlds. He offers peace through marriage to one of the
Aten’s daughters. But what the Aten wants isn’t peace but power with no
constraints, a power that is said to belong to the crown of moonlight,
belonging to the land of Lumina.
Now the Aten
will travel with his two youngest daughters, Noor and Citali, to a neutral area
to met with the new Lumin to talk of this peace treaty. While, in truth, he
will force them to vie for a place next to the new Lumin as his wife, while they
search for the crown of moonlight and then hand it to their father. Noor wants to stop her father, but must learn who
to trust, she sees her starving people and wants to put a stop to the pain her
father causes. Perhaps the answer lies with a union to Caelum whom she is drawn,
but her sister, Citali sees a chance to grab power for herself and her father’s
good will. And what of the eldest daughter, Zarina? She will stop at nothing to
become the next Aten of Helios.
Casey L. Bond has built a world that the
reader can step into and get lost. The sun beats down always on Helios, a
desert of blistering heat and starving people, while the Aten lives in great comfort.
Lumina, is dark and cold but it’s people
are cared for and loyal to their ruler. There are main and secondary characters
that bring their story to life as well as the romance, treachery, loyalty, and fear
that carries the reader through the pages, worlds that are mapped out for us to
see, and full of twists and turns that will delight a mystery reader as well.
And while Noor, her sisters, Citali and Zarina and their father are not a loving
close family, the opposite may be said for the Lumin, Caelum, his brother Beron
and his mother Vada are very close and guard each other. The ending may well
catch the reader unaware. So watch for the sequel to follow shortly.
This review
is based on ARC I received. Casey, has never disappointed this reviewer when it
comes to uniquely, vivid tales that more that capture the attention of her
readers. For young adults and adults alike this is one tale not to miss.
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