![]() ![]() They reject each other, they hurry in opposite directions, pulling the binding taut between them, threatening to snap. But I guess we’ll find out!īut memory and time aren’t friends. At the moment, it’s not yet clear to me what the purpose is of having Auren been turned golden, except to make her (far too easily) recognizable to enemies and to illustrate what kind of a man Midas is. This series is a loose retelling of the King Midas myth. However, I do not feel that this is a problem seeing that the book opens with a trigger warning note and the characters who behave as such are in no way glorified. Is there sexual violence and misogyny in this book? Yes, heaps of it. ![]() I’m not easily shocked, so you won’t hear the same rant from me as you’ll read elsewhere. I really liked this first part of the Plated Prison Series. ![]() Until war arrives on the borders of the kingdom and a dangerous deal is struck with another king. Nevertheless, her trust in king Midas is without question. But even a golden cage is still a cage, so Auren soon starts to dream of a life outside of the palace. ![]() When this talent earns him the hand of the crown princess, he decides to take Auren with him to the palace, turning her golden and naming her his favourite concubine. Gild tells the story of Auren, an orphan girl who is rescued from a violent life by a young man with the remarkable ability to turn anything he touches into solid gold. Plated Prisoner Series Review Overview Book 1: Gild ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |