Balanced on the Blade’s Edge, Dragon Blood Book 1, was originally written as a stand-alone happily-for-now, and it shows with the pacing of the romantic relationship. Not quite insta-love it was pretty quick nonetheless and forced proximity makes it more believable. I’m very glad that Buroker continued the series and gave even more time for the characters, and their lovely relationship, to continue.
Sardelle is probably one of my favorite female lead characters ever. Because she is seemingly unflappable, serene in the face of stressful situations, and tends to give people the benefit of the doubt. So many things I’m not. Well, I am a bit too trusting at times, but I tend to be a lot more chaotic. Jaxi, the sword, is more my speed when it comes to mouthiness. Together, they create a lot of fun.
Ridge is a lovely male lead as well. His roguish, playful side doesn’t overshadow the sense of honor he has and I appreciate that. He has to confront and overcome some major prejudices through the course of this first book. It’s something I wish the book had explored in a bit more detail because while we see more development in terms of the nation as a whole in later books in the series, it feels glossed over in this book. But then, Ridge is a soldier who has trained himself to act quickly based on his gut instincts so it doesn’t come across as far fetched or unbelievable.
From the Publisher: Colonel Ridge Zirkander isn’t the model of military professionalism—he has a tendency to say exactly what’s on his mind, and his record has enough demerits to wallpaper the hull of an airship—but as the best fighter pilot in the Iskandian army, he’s used to a little leniency from his superiors. Until he punches the wrong diplomat in the nose and finds himself issued new orders: take command of a remote prison mine in the inhospitable Ice Blades Mountains. Ridge has never been in charge of anything larger than a flier squadron—what’s he supposed to do with a frozen fortress full of murderers and rapists? Not to mention the strange woman who shows up right before he arrives…
Sardelle Terushan wakes from three hundred years in a mage stasis shelter, only to realize that she is the last of the Referatu, the sorcerers who once helped protect Iskandia from conquerors. Their subterranean mountain community was blown up in a treacherous sneak attack by soldiers who feared their power. Everyone Sardelle ever knew is dead, and the sentient soulblade she has been bonded to since her youth is buried in the core of the mountain. Further, what remains of her home has been infested by bloodthirsty miners commanded by the descendants of the very soldiers who destroyed her people.
Sardelle needs help to reach her soulblade—her only link to her past and her last friend in the world. Her only hope is to pretend she’s one of the prisoners while trying to gain the commander’s trust. But lying isn’t her specialty, especially when the world has changed so much in the intervening centuries, and if Colonel Zirkander figures out who she truly is, he’ll be duty-bound to sentence her to the only acceptable punishment for sorcerers: death.
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