Queen of the Conquered Audiobook By Kacen Callender cover art

Queen of the Conquered

Islands of Blood and Storm, Book 1

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Queen of the Conquered

By: Kacen Callender
Narrated by: Krystel Roche
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About this listen

An ambitious and unflinching tale of colonialism, conquest, and revenge, Queen of the Conquered starts a fantasy series perfect for fans of S. A. Chakraborty, Ken Liu, and Tasha Suri.

Named one of Time's Top 100 Fantasy Books of All Time
World Fantasy Award for Best Novel, winner

On the islands of Hans Lollik, Sigourney Rose was the only survivor when her family was massacred by the colonizers. When the childless king of the islands declares he will choose his successor from amongst eligible noble families, Sigourney is ready to exact her revenge.

But someone is killing off the ruling families to clear a path to the throne. And as the bodies pile up and all eyes regard her with suspicion, Sigourney must find allies among her prey and the murderer among her peers...lest she become the next victim.

Praise for Queen of the Conquered:

"A storm of a novel as epic as Alexandre Dumas's The Count of Monte Cristo." (Tochi Onyebuchi, author of Beasts Made Wild)

"The book's absorbing setting, captivating lead, and relevant themes of race and class complement each other with alternating delicacy and savagery." (NPR Books)

"Callender's first adult novel draws race relations, conquest, magic, and politics into an imaginative, layered story that will keep readers twisting until the end." (Library Journal)

©2019 Kacen Callender (P)2019 Hachette Audio
Action & Adventure African American Coming of Age Epic Epic Fantasy Fantasy Fiction Historical Royalty Island
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Critic reviews

"An ambitious, courageous, and unflinching novel that uncovers the rotten core of our colonial heritage and yet also celebrates the fierce resistance and heroic endurance of the most abused and exploited." (Kate Elliott, author of Black Wolves)

"Callender's first adult novel draws race relations, conquest, magic, and politics into an imaginative, layered story that will keep readers twisting until the end. The author's personal experience growing up in St. Thomas lends to the rich setting and postcolonial themes." (Library Journal, starred review)

"An utterly compelling look at slavery, power, and complicity. Uncomfortable, heart rending, and utterly necessary." (Aliette de Bodard, Nebula Award-winning author)

What listeners say about Queen of the Conquered

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I really really wanted to love it... but I didn't.

I wanted so badly to love this book and there are so many great things about it. I love the idea of a story told from the perspective of a black slave owner and her struggles with class and race. But I felt like I couldn't connect with her or with the other characters.

The narrator was an interesting choice, her accent was great but her delivery was bland and at times inconsistent enough to distract from the story.

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Intense

I didn't expect it to be so intense but I loved it. the narrator's voice took some getting used to, but the story was captivating, violent, and honest.

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the accent of the reader made this hard to follow.

I have ADHD and it made the audiobook extremely difficult for me to follow. I want to start by saying the woman who read the story did an amazing job. For me this particular audiobook was extremely hard to follow because I have adhd. The way that she had pronounced the words had me distracted on either the way she said it or literally translating it to the way that I would say it. I can't tell if the story felt fractioned and slightly hard to follow place and time or if it was because I was too busy paying attention to what the reader was actually conveying.

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Good Story, but.....

You know how you really want to hear the story of when Grandpa met Grandma; but Grandpa just keeps repeating how pretty she looked at a school dance over and over and over........ and over, well that's how the story went.

It was unnecessarily repetitive.

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A Slave Master is No Queen to Her People

In Queen of the Conquered, the author works hard to get the reader to sympathize and empathize with a rapist, a collaborator, a race-traitor, and a slave owner. Sigourney is no queen, she is a slave master. Her people don't serve a beloved monarch, they fear a harsh and oppressive master. Within the first few pages of the book, Sigourney murders her own people, forces an old woman who'd been tortured all her life to kiss her feet, and rapes a man she owns. It is also indicated that he is not the first man forced into her bed. If the protagonist had been male and the victims female, everyone would be up in arms. But, because it is a woman committing the atrocity of rape, it seems as though her crimes are dismissed by readers at large. Throughout the book, she commits, orders, and condones the mistreatment of Black people like herself in the name of achieving a goal she ultimately fails at. That said, the writing style is concise although at times repeatative, and the plot, once made clear, is easy to follow.This book is unapologetically problematic and is NOT RECCOMENDED.

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