• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
FanFiAddict

FanFiAddict

A gaggle of nerds talking about Fantasy, Science Fiction, and everything in-between. They also occasionally write reviews about said books. 2x Stabby Award-Nominated and home to the Stabby Award-Winning TBRCon.

  • Home
  • About
    • Reviewers
    • Review Policy
    • Stance on AI
    • Contact
    • Friends of FFA
  • Blog
    • Reviews
      • Children’s / Middle Grade Books
      • Comics / Graphic Novels
      • Fantasy
        • Alt History
        • Epic Fantasy
        • Fairy Tales
        • Grimdark
        • Heroic Fantasy
        • LitRPG
        • Paranormal Fantasy
        • Romantic Fantasy
        • Steampunk
        • Superheroes
        • Sword and Sorcery
        • Urban Fantasy
      • Fear For All
        • Demons
        • Ghosts
        • Gothic
        • Lovecraftian
        • Monsters
        • Occult
        • Psychological
        • Slasher
        • Vampires
        • Werewolves
        • Witches
        • Zombies
      • Fiction
      • Science Fiction
        • Aliens
        • Artificial Intelligence
        • Alt History
        • Cyberpunk
        • Dystopian
        • Hard SciFi
        • Mechs/Robots
        • Military SF
        • Space Opera
        • Steampunk
        • Time Travel
      • Thriller
    • Neurodivergence in Fiction
    • Interviews
      • Book Tube
      • Authorly Writing Advice
  • SFF Addicts
    • SFF Addicts Clips
    • SFF Addicts (Episode Archive)
  • TBRCon
    • TBRCon2025
    • TBRCon2024
    • TBRCon2023
    • TBRCon2022
  • FFA Book Club
  • FFA TBR Toppers
    • Advertise Your Book on FFA!
  • Writer Resources
    • Artists
    • Cartographers
    • Editing/Formatting/Proofing

Review: The Cerulean Queen (The Nine Realms #4) by Sarah Kozloff

April 30, 2020 by Traveling Cloak (Jason) Leave a Comment

The Cerulean Queen (The Nine Realms, #4)
Amazon
Audible
Barnes & Noble
Book Depository
Bookshop
Libro.fm
Goodreads

Rating: 9/10

Synopsis

Sarah Kozloff’s breathtaking and cinematic epic fantasy series The Nine Realms, which began with A Queen in Hiding, comes to a thrilling conclusion in The Cerulean Queen.

The true queen of Weirandale has returned.

Cerulia has done the impossible and regained the throne. However, she’s inherited a council of traitors, a realm in chaos, and a war with Oromondo.

Now a master of her Gift, to return order to her kingdom she will use all she has learned—humility, leadership, compassion, selflessness, and the necessity of ruthlessness.

Review

In The Cerulean Queen, the exciting fourth and final book in the Nine Realms series, author Sarah Kozloff details the fate of Cerulia, Weirandale, and the Free States. Last we saw, Cerulia was back in Weirandale under the guise of Wren – her adopted childhood name. Her foster sister was marrying Lord Matwyck’s son, the same Lord Matwyck who seized control of Weirandale after Cerulia’s mother fled. Thalen’s Raiders have just finished a battle with the Oromandos, who are resetting their army and making strategic decisions. There is so much to look forward to in the finale, as all of the storylines crash together in one decisive volume.

As reader, you can look forward to more of the same from Kozloff in this book. The author’s biggest strength is writing descriptive scenes, and there is no lack of description, here. This is what originally made me fall in love with the series. My review of the first book called it “immersive”, and that has never changed. Through each volume of the series, I have allowed myself to dive deeper and deeper into this world Kozloff created by letting those descriptions wrap themselves around me and take over my imagination – so much so that I did not much want to leave. The Cerulean Queen only cements that feeling even more; in fact, there are many times in this book where I thought the descriptions may have been overkill. Certain scenes dragged a little, and I found myself asking once or twice if we could move the plot along a little. But, I would rather have that than a book that skims over scenes, barely touching the surface as it gets to the end. Kozloff has written this book as a series of deep dives, leaving no detail untouched.

The same goes for the characters. They are so well-written throughout the whole series that it has become so easy to care about where they end up. We have watched Cerulia and Thalen grow up from timid youngsters to become confident leaders, and the same goes for players like Gunnit and Percia. And, while they are all really great, Cerulia steals the show. As the story is told through several perspectives, the reader spends more time with Princella than anyone else; which is no surprise, as this is her story. We get to hear every thought, capture every feeling, absorb every experience. The Cerulean Queen takes that to the extreme, as Cerulia takes the throne and now her decisions will decide the fate of her country and its people. This is a different side of the now-Queen: she is no longer in day-to-day survival mode. She has power, an army, retainers, and body guards all at her command. Every one of them willing to die for her on a whim. It is important that the reader see how she handles that power. Will she use her power to exact revenge on those who have wronged her, sacrificing the lives of her people in the process? Will she be a gracious queen or will regaining the throne boost her ego? Without giving too much away, I am happy to report that Cerulia does not disappoint.

I was really satisfied with the way the book ended. It took longer than I wanted to get there, but I did not necessarily mind hanging out with Cerulia for a while as the other storylines played out. When the climax hit, it hit hard – the story ends in a splash, proving Kozloff’s ability to write big scenes and tie a story up nicely.

The Cerulean Queen is a nearly perfect ending to what has been a fantastic series. I recommend this book (and the whole series) highly to any and all fantasy readers. I am sad the adventure had to end, but Sarah Kozloff has made a fan out of me. I am excited to read what she writes next.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: import

About Traveling Cloak (Jason)

Traveling Cloak (Jason) is an accountant and lives in the Chicago area. He is an aspiring bookseller and just wants to read and review books without all the nonsense. Traveling Cloak reviews fantasy, science fiction, space opera, horror, and every once in a while literary fiction. He does not read e-books.

Other Reviews You Might Like

Review: A Drop of Corruption by Robert Jackson Bennett

Review: Becoming a Druid (Protectors of Pretanni 1) by Mike Mollman

Review: Exodus — The Archimedes Engine (Book #1 of the Archimedes Engine Duology) by Peter F. Hamilton

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. aquavenatus says

    April 30, 2020 at 8:47 am

    Great review and great use of (certain) words!

    Reply
    • travelingcloak says

      April 30, 2020 at 11:07 am

      Thank you. I always try to put a few Easter Eggs in there when I can. Glad you appreciate that.

      Reply
  2. Mogsy @ BiblioSanctum says

    May 1, 2020 at 2:15 am

    Glad this ended well for you! I have about a few dozen pages left, and I have to say I am a bit let down. I’m sure it has everything to do with my own expectations though, I thought we’d go through a huge struggle for Cerulia to get her throne back, but that battle happened right at the beginning and the rest was kind of administrative drama, lol.

    Reply
    • travelingcloak says

      May 1, 2020 at 4:59 am

      I agree with that. That is why I mentioned there were times in this book where I wanted the plot to move along. I was not sure how the review was going to go, but the last 100 pages did it for me.

      Reply

Leave a Reply to travelingcloak Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Sponsored By

Use Discount Code FANFI For 5% Off!

FFA Newsletter!

Sign up for updates and get FREE stories from Michael R. Fletcher and Richard Ford!

What Would You Like To See?(Required)
Please select the type of content you want to receive from FanFi Addict. You can even mix and match if you want!

FFA Author Hub

Read A.J. Calvin
Read Andy Peloquin
Read C.J. Daily
Read C.M. Caplan
Read D.A. Smith
Read DB Rook
Read Francisca Liliana
Read Frasier Armitage
Read Josh Hanson
Read Krystle Matar
Read M.J. Kuhn

Recent Reviews

Recent Comments

  1. Mark Matthews on COVER REVEAL: To Those Willing to Drown by Mark MatthewsJanuary 7, 2025
  2. Basra Myeba on Worth reading Jack Reacher books by Lee Child?January 5, 2025
  3. Ali on Review: Sleeping Worlds Have No Memory by Yaroslav BarsukovJanuary 5, 2025
  4. Carter on So you want to start reading Warhammer 40,000? Here’s where to start!January 4, 2025
  5. M. Zaugg on Bender’s Best LitRPG reads of 2024January 3, 2025

Archive

Copyright © 2025 · Powered by ModFarm Sites · Log In