King of Scars duology

These books were one of the last ones I read towards the end of 2021, King of Scars and Rule of Wolves by Leigh Bardugo. set in the Grisha verse, like the other books by the same author that I absolutely love!

I have tried to talk about this in a spoiler free way, so if you’re hoping to read them, or looking forward to the Netflix series, then you should be safe to read this.

A rubbish summary

These books follow the aftermath of The Shadow Bone series and The Six of crows duology, the story follows Nina’s journey now that she has come back to her homeland, as well as Nikolai and Zoya, as well as many other favourites from the series that came before (trying to be non-specific about who because that does involve spoilers). The rumours about Nikolai being a bastard threaten his throne, all while Ravka is trying to hold back incursions from Fjerda and the Shu at their borders. There is another threat sweeping across all the countries, land is being lost to areas just like the fold that divided Ravka in two. Nina chooses to return to Fjerda as a spy, to save Grisha and smuggle them to safety in Ravka but, after spending too long with the Crows she finds it harder and harder to obey orders, so when the opportunity presents itself to get inside Yard Bruhm’s household (the fearsome commander of the Fjerdan army), she takes it. Nikolai and Zoya try to keep Ravka from descending into war again, all while they try to unravel the legacy of the Darkling’s magic on Ravka and the Grisha.

My thoughts

Ah, I loved it! Although, I will say that for Leigh Bardugo, this ending was suspiciously happy and I don’t trust it. If you’ve read the books that came before, you will not regret reading these! There were some mutterings online (specifically booktok) that this was vanity publishing for the fans and the story wasn’t meant to carry on but that’s absolute nonsense. These books tie up a lot of loose ends from the prior series’, as well as giving characters such as Zoya some interesting depth and roundness that we didn’t have before but the seeds for which were definitely planted earlier. You see so many favourite faces and get to continue the stories of characters I loved from the previous books (specifically, we visit the Crows for a bit!). I will say, it’s unlikely these books will make a lot of sense if you haven’t read the ones that came before, or at least, some of the emotional depth will be missing.

As I’m trying to keep these reviews short and sweet now, that’s all I’m going to say!

The Colour Of Revenge – Olivia Jane

Indie spotlight: The Colour Of Revenge – Olivia Jane

“I’m not a serial killer. I prefer the term artist.”

This book is the 1st in the Murderously romantic series, A dark, twisted, and dangerously seductive world where love is built on obsession, and revenge is served bloodstained.

2026 reading goals

It’s a new year so it’s time to set some goals for my 2026 reads! Now, I do these as something to aim towards/ as motivation but they are fairly loosey goosey.

2025 reading wrap-up

I didn’t quite hit my fairly lofty reading goals but since a lot of cool things happened in my personal life this year, i’m pretty happy with my total for the year

Read the post to see everything I read!

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3 responses to “King of Scars duology”

  1. […] can also read my review of Six of Crows duology, Shadow and Bone and King of Scars […]

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