Book Review: King of Thorns by Mark Lawrence.

King of Thorns by Mark Lawrence is the second book in The Broken Empire Series. In this book, King Jorg has to defend his new kingdom against the huge army of an adversary who wants to unite the nations.  The odds are stacked against him, old enemies continue their attempts to bring him down, and the struggle between of a fire mage and a dead king are threatening to tear him apart.   

The Cover: This is a good cover in my opinion. There is a cloaked man sitting on a stone throne draped with a red cloth, wresting one hand on a skull, and holding a large blue disc in the other. Similar to book 1, he is surrounded by dead bodies, or rather, sitting atop a mound of dead bodies, with more swords jutting up all around. It ties in well with the series covers and the title stands out in the large silver font against the dark black/grey cover art. Likewise, the author’s name contrasts well in a white font at the top of the cover. It is a solid fantasy image and encompasses the story within.

The Good Stuff: This is a solid fantasy novel by Mark Lawrence. His is an author with strong writing skills, and I was pleased to see his characters grow in this book. My issues with the first book disappeared with book 2. The first person POV didn’t bother me at all. I’m not sure if it is because I was expecting it and had already accepted that it would be first person, or if the first person POV writing has improved to the extent that I hardly noticed it. I also found Jorg to be much more likable in this book.  

The Bad Stuff: This is a personal preference only. I love my fantasy to be set in a medieval type setting with all kind of creatures like elves, ogres, dragons, vampires, zombies, etc… But the magic of this type of fantasy world is disrupted when modern technology is introduced. I have seen a few authors do this, (including my favourite author). A modern world destroyed and returned to more primitive times. It is a good idea and lots of people love it, but I prefer not to see modern items like guns and watches in my fantasy. 

Overall, I enjoyed this book more than book 1 and will finish the series. There are strong fantasy elements and a good story that continues on from the 1st book. Like any good fantasy, there are power struggles, politics, and betrayals, as well as magic, monsters, strong friendships and comradery. Book 2 gets a dream tainted, sword clashing, dead raising, 4 out of 5 golden bookmarks from me.

Book Haul for 2025

Hello Readers,

I scheduled this post to be published in January, but I just realised it didn’t publish for some reason. I have already reviewed a few of the books in this book haul and am still reading through the others. While this is later than intended, I thought I would post it anyway. so you can see what’s left on my reading list for this year and check out the previous reviews you may have missed.

Here is the originally intended post:

Ok, so here are the books I plan to read over 2025, in no particular order:

Red Sister – Mark Lawrence

Prince of Thorns – Mark Lawrence

King of Thorns – Mark Lawrence

Emperor of Thorns – Mark Lawrence

Dead Man’s Steel – Luke Scull

The God is Not Willing – Steven Erikson

I picked all these up from local secondhand bookstores. If I enjoy them, I will find a place for them on my bookshelf, among the others in my collection, and give them a new home. If not, I will send them back to one of the local secondhand stores for someone else to enjoy.

I have read Mark Lawrence before and enjoyed his work. So, I grabbed a few more of his books when I saw them. I can’t wait to get stuck into these, but I need to finish my re-read of Half a War by Joe Abercrombie first.

As always, I will post my reviews for you after I finish reading each book.

Happy Reading!