Hidden Warrior (The Tamír Triad, #2) by Lynn Flewelling


Hidden Warrior (The Tamír Triad, #2)
Title : Hidden Warrior (The Tamír Triad, #2)
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0007113102
ISBN-10 : 9780007113101
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 576
Publication : First published January 1, 2003
Awards : Gaylactic Spectrum Award Best Novel (2004)

The line of Skala's ruling queens was established in accordance with prophecy. But now King Erius reigns, and he is ruthless in his determination to rid of Skala of any threat to his grip on power.

As the only living child of Erius's dead sister, Prince Tobin is second in line to the throne. But he is not what he seems. To protect him from the paranoid assassinations ordered by his uncle, Tobin's identity was disguised shortly after birth. But now, with the onset of puberty, Tobin has discovered his true self -- she is the rightful heir to the throne.

At court, Tobin and his loyal squire Ki form part of Crown Prince Korin's inner circle. Tobin is forced to live a lie, deceiving not only his potential enemies but also his closest friends. But soon the time will come when Skala will have need of her true Queen.

And as plague ravages the land, ancient enemies threaten war and the wizards who have traditionally protected Skala are mercilessly persecuted, it seems that day may be drawing near. Tobin must be ready to reveal her true identity and serve her country, whatever the personal cost.


Hidden Warrior (The Tamír Triad, #2) Reviews


  • Stephen


    Photobucket

    Um...Ms. Flewelling...may I call you Lynn...okay, Ms. Flewelling...if you ever see this review, I want you to know that this rating/review is a reflection of MY FAILURE and not yours. I don’t think this is a bad book and I don’t think there are serious flaws in its execution. I think the lack of happy units I gained from this read is because sometimes I suck as a reader and pick up the wrong book at the wrong time. What I am trying to say is that it's me....not you.
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    Let me explain.

    For me (and maybe for a lot of us) my enjoyment (and subsequent rating) of a book can be significantly affected by external matters completely outside of the novel itself. By this I mean situations where our mood or environment makes us more or less disposed to one kind of book over another. Now there are some books *cough*
    Twilight *cough*
    Dead and Alive*cough*
    All-Star Batman & Robin the Boy Wonder, Volume 1 *cough* that I would hate even if I was reading them while getting the Deluxe Treatment at “Happy Endings” Message Parlor. By the same token, there are books I would love even if I was reading them in the middle of colonoscopy (e.g.,
    The Lies of Locke Lamora,
    The Blade Itself).

    Then there are books that can just hit you at the right or wrong time and make an impact on you for good or for bad. For example, the first time I ever read
    The Dying Earth by Jack Vance I thought it was just okay, but not great. Why? Because I read it too fast. I had just finished a rather “brain draining” read and thought I was picking up something light and breezy that I could fly through. WRONG again!! Anyone who has read Vance knows that his books are not light and his prose can convey more info in a short paragraph than lesser writers could do in a whole chapter.

    Luckily, I eventually stopped reading it like a tool and allowed myself to be pulled into the story. The result: a massive man-crush on Jack Vance and
    The Dying Earth is now one of my all time favorite books. So, it happens.

    Simalarly, if you have seen my review of
    The Old Man and the Sea, you know that the circumstances under which I read it were as perfect as they could be and I absolutely fell in love with the story. Now, it is true that everything I loved about Papa’s fish tale is really there in the text, but if I had not been receptive to it, my experience might have been much different.

    So what I am saying rambling about is that a lot of things can influence the way we feel about a book. Mood (good or bad), setting (cozy and quite vs loud and uncomfortable), Energy (tired and groggy vs rested and alert), life situations (just got a promotion vs just lost your job), Distraction level (hungry or worried about project you need to finish vs satiated and relaxed because you just finished that big project). Maybe we’re sad and so that beautifully written but deeply depressing historical fiction novel just leaves us cold. Maybe we are pissed at the world and so the latest Discworld novel doesn’t generate the number of giggles it otherwise might. Maybe were drunk and so that pulpy SF story just goes down smooth. Maybe we’ve read too many stories lately with similar plots or characters and so the one we are reading now, despite being well written, feels too much like “same old, same old.”

    And maybe...there are times when you just need to take a break from a genre even if it happens to be one of your favorites. I think this may be where I am heading with traditional epic fantasy. I can think of no other explanation for my lack of interest in this book.

    Hidden Warrior is very well-written (Lynn...I mean Ms. Flewelling writes excellent prose). The characters are well-drawn, three-dimensional and the author genuinely breathes life into them. The plot takes on some very important and interesting issues regarding gender and sexual identity as it revolves around a main character who was born a girl but was “magically” transformed into a boy in order to protect her/him. In addition, there is a complex, detailed history, healthy amounts of political intrigue and a well defined and interesting magic system.

    Yet, for all of that...I COULDN’T EVEN BEGIN TO CARE ABOUT THE PLOT…...not even a little bit...50 pages into the story and I was screaming at myself for not reading something else. Plus, I am one of those morons who once I begin a book, I will finish it (no matter how much I might desperately want to). I also don't skim which only adds to my pain sometimes.

    So I struggled through this which was both a disservice to me and to your book Ly..uh...Ms Flewelling. Both you and your book deserved a better effort from me.

    Still, I have to be honest and say that I didn’t really like the story. Thus, I am forced to slap a two star rating on it as the best I can do at this time. I just wanted to explain my rationale because I think this MAY BE a much better story than my rating would suggest and is certainly superior to the other 2 star books on my shelves.

    I am going to put this on me list of “to re-read” and hope to come back to this story at some time in the future when I might be more receptive to the story. For now, 2.0 stars and one more heart-felt apology to you, Ms. Flewelling...

    Im Sorry Pictures, Images and Photos

  • Algernon (Darth Anyan)

    [7/10]

    Hear the Dream of Hyradin. 'And so came the Beautiful One, the Eater of Death, to strip the bones of the world. First clothed in Man's Flesh it came, crowned with a dread helm of darkness and none could stand against this One but Four.
    First shall be the Guardian, a vessel of light in the darkness. Then the Shaft and the Vanguard, who shall fail and yet not fail if the Guide, the Unseen One, goes forth. And at the last shall again be the Guardian, whose portion is bitter, bitter as gall when they meet under the Pillar of the Sky'


    The second book of the Tamir Triad is governed, like the first one, by the inflexible rules of Prophecy. All is Predestination and the insignificant humans are just ants moving down paths already chosen by Gods. In the first book, a child is killed and another is hidden in plain sight in an effort to ensure compliance with a generations old dictum than only a Queen of the Royal line can save the land of Skala from destruction. To make their Will known, these cruel gods are not adverse to bring the seven plagues (war, famine, pestilence, etc) on the heads of the unfortunate people of the kingdom, all for the crime of being led by a man. Admittedly, this King Erius and his 'Waffen SS' chief wizard Nyrin are guilty of numerous atrocities and deserve to be brought down, but I still feel the misfortunes visited on the innocent bystanders were a bit over the top.

    All of this was already established in book one, which followed closely the childhood of Tobin, the child of prophecy. Readers familiar with the fantasy genre know that it is customary for the second book in a trilogy to raise the stakes of the conflict between good and evil and to evolve from a personal quest to a world shattering cataclysm. Flewelling makes no exception to this unwritten rule, and that is why she comes up with the new prophecy that I have used to open the review.

    This Gnomic Utterance (copyright Diana Wynne Jones) encapsulates the best and the worst that the genre has to offer. It will probably sound like gibberish to the uninitiated, but to the fans it is like that sign on the old maps : "Here be Dragons!", promising adventure, and a journey into wonder and danger. Likewise for me, the Tamir trilogy showcases the best and the worst that the fantasy genre has to offer:

    On the plus side, Lynn Flewelling is doing a great job at characterization, continuing the study of sexual identity and of different kinds of discrimination : against magic users, against women, against the poor. The attention to detail that makes the reader care about the fate of Tobin, of squire Kirothius, of wizards Arkoniel, Iya and Lhel, is also slowing down the pace of the novel to a crawl, at least in the first half of this second book, as Tobin is still in training as a warrior and companion to the King's son and heir. Luckily for the more impatient reader, the action really takes off in the second half, where the author demonstrates that she can write battle scenes with as much ability as her character studies.

    Still on the plus side is the magic system and the use of necromancy, although in the later battles, this magic tends to become generic fireballs and thunderstrikes. I have hopes of improvement and of more revelations about the magic system in the third book, where I expect the neighboring Plenimaran kingdom to play a greater role.

    On the minus side, with so much importance given to prophecy, the plot becomes predictable and the much too clear separation between the heroes and the villains feels simplistic to the modern reader more used to shades of grey characters. The internal conflict of Tobin / Tamir is very well done, but it doesn't quite make up for the typecasting of the rest of the crowd.

    Recommended to readers who enjoyed "The Bone Doll's Twin" - indeed it doesn't make any sense to start in the middle of the series, and to those who like traditional fantasy with young underdogs fighting evil overlords. I'm heading now into the third and last of the trilogy, expecting major battles against impossible odds and a lot of fun along the way.

  • Sherwood Smith


    Readers new to the fantasy genre might do best to begin with THE BONE DOLL’S TWIN before trying this book, though Flewelling works hard at layering in needed backstory. But the world she has built is complex, and the action non-stop, which might make it difficult for a young reader, or someone just trying fantasy for the first time, to assemble all the clues quickly enough to stay with the headlong pace.

    In HIDDEN WARRIOR Tobin, the protagonist, wakes up after a harrowing experience in which he discovered that he is really a she, but prisoned in a boy’s body. But this boy’s body is the body Tobin is used to, has lived in for twelve years! There is hardly time to brood over it, as there are serious problems all around: his squire and best friend is severely wounded, maybe dying; his horrible guardian wants him back under control; his uncle, the king, who ordered the deaths of all warrior women and their babies, might be coming back from the wars. And weaving eerily in and out of real life is Brother, the demonic ghost of Tobin’s dead twin, who is gaining powers of his own.

    Tobin eventually has to go back to a capital city that is increasingly beset by extreme famine and plagues, as predicted by the practitioners of Skala’s oldest religion. Despite the Harriers, who are busily extirpating wizards (who are being blamed for Skala’s problems), the old magics are not only being preserved, but the mages are making discoveries that they are determined to use to come back, and put a queen back on the throne, as Skala is supposed to be ruled.

    Tobin remembers every once in a while that that queen is he--a fact that is a real smack in the spirit, because he loves his cousin who is heir to the throne, and discovers he loves the king, when he finally does return, though sometimes the king’s moods are difficult.

    What happens as Tobin and his friends pass from young teens to young men and women, and seasoned warriors, comprises the remainder of the book. They must train and discover sex; Tobin discovers history and philosophy and his own past; the wizards who protect and menace him work at their own goals. There are no Evil Emperors or one dimensional henchminions. All the people surrounding Tobin are fascinating and quite unpredictable characters.

    Above all, Flewelling handles the gender questions with such skill that the reader really feels Tobin’s ambivalence.

    There is a strong climax and enough resolution to satisfy the reader, while leaving enough threads dangling to entice the reader to the concluding volume.

  • Meg

    Hidden Warrior
    OR
    Obvious Warrior, Hidden Vagina

    I had trouble putting this book down. I knew how this book had to end, generally. I knew that going into this series. But knowing a general ending didn't stop me from wanting to see how it got there, to see how the characters react to every event, struggle through them, avoid getting into more trouble.

    This is drama. This is what it does. Damn is it good when it's done well.

    I like the delicate brush Flewelling uses to paint the gender issues in this one. There's more of it present in this novel, as Tobin is aware of the gender discrepancy. But its not over done, because he chooses to ignore the issue. But he can't escape it, running into it head long as everyone is growing up, coming into puberty, and the gender becomes the crux of so many interactions. There too are moments of longing for Tobin, which are followed by shame and fear. Yet, for all this, its handled delicately. The politics dominate the characters' thoughts, though the conspiracy dominates the books plot. The ending was satisfying, while still leaving a number of issues unraveled to be tackled later.

  • Kirsten

    A worthy sequel to The Bone Doll's Twin. I didn't find it QUITE as wrenching and creepy as the first book, possibly because much of the mystery surrounding Tobin's and Brother's origins has been cleared up (and Tobin knows who and what he is, now). But this is an excellent middle book, and I am going to go insane if Flewelling doesn't get writing!

  • Kat  Hooper

    3.5 Originally posted at FanLit.

    http://www.fantasyliterature.com/revi...

    Hidden Warrior is the second installment in Lynn Flewelling’s TAMIR TRIAD about Tobin, the rightful heir to the throne of Skala who is being magically hidden as a girl until it’s time for her to challenge the king. As this book begins, Tobin has just discovered the horrifying truth about himself, but he must still stay hidden until it’s time for the big reveal. He’s now living at the castle as a Companion to the prince. He’s nervous about the future because he genuinely likes his cousin, the presumed heir, and he is treated well by his uncle, though he occasionally sees glimpses of the king’s unpredictable bad temper and sees how he mistreats the wizards and others who speak against him or mention the prophecy about a hidden queen.

    As Tobin nears puberty, he still thinks of himself as a boy, but his gender identity confusion begins to increase. He is noticeably smaller than the other boys, lacks facial hair, enjoys making jewelry, and has no interest in girls. Even though he excels at fighting and battle tactics, he’s also sensitive and squeamish about the king’s harsh punishment of “traitors.” Worst of all, he’s falling in love with his squire, Ki, who has no idea that Tobin is really a girl. Though the gender identity issue is the big theme in the TAMIR TRIAD, it’s handled gently, without any sort of preachiness.

    Tobin has plenty of other things to worry about, too, such as Brother, who is becoming less controllable, the malicious man who acts as his guardian, and the scheming duke who is steward over his lands. There are other plots he doesn’t even know about yet, but that will surely affect him in the future. Meanwhile, the country begins to suffer from plague and there are murmurs about the prophesied queen who will set things right. The king and the prince show their cruel sides more often as their popularity wanes, and Tobin’s magical allies have had to go into hiding.

    Flewelling’s story continues to entertain me, mostly because her world and characters are so well developed and I’ve come to sincerely care about Tobin’s plight. The simple plot isn’t quite hefty enough to carry three books, so this installment’s pace lags at times, sometimes feeling a little like the infamous “middle book.” There’s also a lot of angst that doesn’t quite feel gratuitous, but does fill a lot of page space. In general, though, I feel very forgiving about the pace because I like the story, though I think it helps that I read Hidden Warrior while leisurely working on a jigsaw puzzle during the couple of lazy days after Christmas.

    Just like the previous book, The Bone Doll’s Twin, this one ends on an exciting cliffhanger. You’ll definitely want to have the third book, The Oracle’s Queen, ready to go. I’ve been listening to Victor Bevine narrate the audio version, which is very good.

  • Aneta

    Druhý díl začíná přímo tam, kde ten první skončil, takže je rozhodně lepší pokud u sebe máte všechni knížky, abyste mohli pokračovat ve čtení. Tobin zjistil kým skutečně je a od toho se odvíjí druhá kniha. Je tu více magie, intrik, bitev, napětí a stále tu byly scény, které byly poměrně nechutné . Máme tu i párkrát pohled Niryna, který nám trochu podkrývá své plány.
    Čtení rychle utíkalo, Ki a Tobin jsou stále moji oblíbenci a prostě se už nemůžu dočkat až si přečtu závěrečný díl!

  • Katy

    Starts off a bit slow, and I was worried the book might suffer from Second in the series syndrome. But it picks up and is quite a good read. We are left hanging as to what comes next though.

  • Cat

    I thought this was a duology. Apparently not. ON TO BOOK THREE!!! Wooo!

  • Nafiza

    The second novel in The Tamir Triad trilogy loses none of the charm of the first. In fact, it makes an already intriguing world downright amazing. I loved how the characters are developed and the faint stirrings of romance between the two main characters promises that the conclusion to the trilogy will pack a punch in more than one way.

    So the pace continued in its languid manner and I'm not gonna lie, I did for a minute or two wish they could just hurry up and get the reveal over with. However, at the end of the novel I was glad that Flewelling took the time she did because it has more momentum when it happens the way it did. I was surprised by how Korin's character was developed and I thought that Flewelling's careful attention to the grey in a person's character was well done. The novel is populated by such wonderful characters that I wouldn't mind reading all their individual stories. There's Lutha and Nikides, Una, Ahra - it is actually an awesome compliment from me (ahem ahem) that I remember the names of the characters in the book because usually I don't even remember the name of the main character.

    And this book won my love by having cats being mini characters. I am a cat person (future cat lady? ha) and Flewelling's portrayal of the felines was entertaining. Of course, on the other side of it, Niryn became slimier than ever. What is he doing with that Nalia? Okay, I'll stop pretending this is a review because honestly, I just want to talk about the book. I thought that Tobin going naked in front of all those people took balls he didn't have. I understood why it had to be done and I don't even have to any trouble with it. I just thought it interesting.

    Oh also, I hope Flewelling keeps Tobin/Tamir as ordinary as possible and not, you know, on a pedestal. That would interfere with the original dynamic too much and I don't know...I kinda like it the way it is right now. I am not looking forward to see what that wizard has up his sleeve but I am looking forward to seeing how Ki copes with a female best friend.

  • hayls 🐴

    This review contains no spoilers if you have already read the first installment The Bone Doll's Twin. If you haven't read that and don't want it's plot spoiled, then what are you even doing reading this sequel review? Go away.

    This story has a gay side-character, and the main character is gender-queer...ish (maybe that's the wrong word). But don't get excited.

    Hidden Warrior is mainly concerned with how Prince Tobin deals with recently learned knowledge that he was born a girl, and was made to appear as a boy for protection. I think it's a really cool idea which had the potential to explore gender and identity.. but it fell short of my expectations.
    The reason basically is this. Tobin has been written in such a way as to eventually be a cis-gendered, straight female in the end. Tobin's gender identity has nothing to do with him, and is treated as an absolute, external phenomenon. For example, it is quite clear that Tobin initially identifies as male because he has been raised as such, but his birth gender is presented in the book as his valid gender. He doesn't have a say in how he will eventually identify - as male, female, or somewhere in between. He will just return to being female, end of story (literally).
    I got a bit excited when Tobin develops a crush on his male squire Ki and in his non-interest in girls and thought it had the potential to explore a bit about his own gender and sexuality preferences. But it didn't. And then I realised it was all a means to an end - so when Tobin becomes female, it is all nice and heterosexual and non-queer.
    Also, the author treats gender as being innately linked to what's between your legs.
    I really liked The Bone Doll's Twin because of all the spookiness in the story and the big plot twist at the end, and Hidden Warrior only needed small changes to make it much better. And it would've made a big difference.

  • Lowed

    This is my kind of blend.. Fantasy, drama, action and a great prose closing some of the plot threads before the end is even near.

    Did I mention this trilogy deserved to be in between Robin Hobb and Jacqueline Carey's in your shelves?

  • Cris

    I recently re-read this novel with hopes to have a chance to give it a better review this time.

    (More to come tomorrow!!)

  • Sadie S

    This book was interesting. It was extremely weird and gross but also good at the same time! It was faster paced than the first book so I liked it better, and the story definitely progressed in good ways. I like most of the characters and enjoy the way this book was written. I am looking forward to reading the next one.

  • Kathi

    9/10
    So many intertwining plot lines in a very well-told story.

  • Kogiopsis

    This book is... compelling. Compelling enough that even though it is clearly a middle book, and doesn't really have a strong plot arc in and of itself, I still devoured it. Compelling enough that before I'd even finished it I went and requested the third book on interlibrary loan.

    And yet.

    I think if I'd read this series closer to when they actually came out, in the early 2000s, the handling of Tamir/Tobin's gender would have been eye-opening. Reading it in 2021, as a queer adult with friends all across a wide spectrum of gender identities, it just feels incomplete.

    This is a rich premise when it comes to examining gender, and yet it's weirdly a nonissue. Tobin - which is the name I'm going to use for this review because it's how the character is referred to through most of the book - has a few scattered moments of contemplating what it would be like to be a woman, how things would be different, but by and large is more worried about the idea of claiming the throne. When the actual transformation occurs, the third-person limited narration uses he/him to refer to Tobin right up until their breasts are revealed:

    The old skin that had covered his chest was pulled tight, bulging like-
    Like a maiden's bodice.
    Shivering, Tobin stripped the old husk away and stared down at her small breasts.

    (Emphasis mine)

    Later, there's a brief period in Tobin's POV which continues to use he/him pronouns, before switching over when Tobin sees their reflection.

    And it's just... not really commented on much beyond that. Body is made equivalent to gender; Tobin doesn't really seem attached to an identity either way. It feels more like a story about an agender character than anything else, which doesn't really fit with the importance of Skala's line of queens, and the lack of examination doesn't help. The whole idea of gender and identity is at once central to the story and completely understated. It's jarring.

    I continue to be interested to see how Tobin adapts to being Tamir, and I will be reading the last book, but I'll also probably still be daydreaming about a version of this series written and published in the (somewhat) more gender-diverse society of 2021.

  • Anne Denise

    I thought this whole series was brilliant. I've never been what anyone would call a fast reader, but this book was so riveting that I read it (550 pages) in 8 days. That is somewhat of a record for me! Recommend wholeheartedly to any who love epic fantasy. This one has plenty of swords and sorcery but with many unique twists. Just traditional enough to hit the spot, but not so traditional that you feel you've read it all before. Also has a uniquely "spooky" sensibility that will appeal to those who are interested in supernatural phenomenon (ghosts, hauntings, etc.). I really can't say enough about Lynn Flewelling's writing and character development. She had me on the edge of my seat!

  • Emily

    I am really enjoying this series. I don't know why no one on my friends list here has read it or even marked it as "to read" - maybe this is just an unknown author? This series (so far) is reminiscent of the first Farseer trilogy. Both series start out with boys growing up in a royal household, training for their "destiny", and they both have important/powerful adult protectors. Both stories have a good plot, and great characters. The friendship between Tobin and Ki reminds me of the Fitz and Fool friendship.

  • Noemí

    madre bendita del cielo santísimo

  •  ☆Ruth☆

    I can't decide between a 3 or a 4 star for this one. Yes, I definitely liked it but did I really, really like it? I'm not so sure.... so I guess it has to be a 3.5 star (which of course we can't show - sigh).
    It's a good, solid fantasy, fulfilling the sword and sorcery criteria; the main characters are convincing and likeable enough but it just feels as though a tiny 'something' is missing... it seems to lack a bit of umph!
    However, I'm interested enough to finish the trilogy and I would recommend these books to lovers of the genre.

  • Selina

    Diving back into the story, the characters feel already like family.
    I adore the prose and the characters in this unique and classic setting.
    It is a slow moving book and a great change of pace compared to most modern actionpacked, twisty and rollercoasting novels. Maybe that's why I enjoyed it so much. Another reason might be that the writing reminds me of Robin Hobb, which is a great compliment and gets me all nostalgic.
    I think there was more happening in book 1 overall, but in book 2 the characters grew even more on me.
    I'm looking forward to what the finale has in store for me.

  • Maggie K

    This was surprisingly good for a second-in-the-series novel, lots of action and intrigue that kept going until the big reveal at the end.


    Looking forward to #3!

  • heb

    i should really try to slow down and savor these

  • Joy

    In this second book of the trilogy, Tobin struggles with the knowledge of his true sex and is finally revealed as Tamir, a girl child hidden away by magic to avoid execution by the cruel king. Will her Companions still accept her? Will her best friend Ki? This book is something of a cross between the classic Alanna series and Woolf's Orlando. We have a similar story about a young woman disguised as a man who wants nothing more than to be a warrior, but must challenge social mores to do so. We also have a similar gender flip, in exactly the same manner as Woolf's novel. In fact, I'm sure Flewelling took inspiration from Woolf's writing, especially as her prose invites the reader to think about how a simple pronoun change affects our interpretation of the main character- it's a good reminder of the deeply gendered nature of our language. I really liked many of the characters, though the villain was one dimensional, despite a feeble attempt by Flewelling to give us Niryn's history condensed in one chapter...I only had a few complaints about this book. One, there's a rather essentialist view about gender, embracing the notion that one has a male or female "soul." The warrior queen has tiny breasts and hips (boyish), while the scary witch is voluptuous....those are worn stereotypes, there. Basically, this classic tale of gender disguise needs a 21st century update that thinks deeply about trans characters in a way that avoids pure/impure dichotomies. Any takers??? Also, I felt sorely deprived of a loooove scene at the end. Seriously, all that slow buildup and no action? Sheesh! In any case, this is a really absorbing epic fantasy. The historical documents, or shreds of history seen from the point of view of scholars centuries later, were cool and strongly suggest a "next step" in this world for the author. I'll be checking it out.

  • Sally

    The Tamir Trilogy is truly a `proper' trilogy - that is, a single story, broken up into three volumes, as opposed to a series of self-contained, interconnected books. Book 2 (Hidden Warrior) continues the story, as Tobin tries to fit in at court with her cousin, the Prince, the other noble children, and their squires. By this point in the trilogy, Tobin knows the truth about herself, leaving her to not only to cope with her own destiny, but to struggle with a secret that threatens to change everything and everyone around herself.

    While not as dark and gothic as the first volume, this one is equally as bleak. We see a young `boy' struggling with the knowledge that he's really a `girl' inside, and fighting the thoughts and feelings of the one, which do not mesh with the other. Confusing matters further is Tobin's awkward relationship with Ki, his long-time, faithful squire. By the end of this second volume, it's clear that they have feelings for one another, even if one can't express them and the other can't really understand them. In Ki, we find the friend every tgirl craves - never have I loved a supporting character more.

    Once again, for transgender readers, Tobin's emerging conflicts really hit home, and are handled beautifully. It's a heartbreaking struggle to witness (and to share), but there is a glimmer of hope on the horizon. We get the sense that the truth truly will set her free.

  • Amanda Kratz

    Again this is a wonderfully written story. It is so incredibly engaging, but it doesn’t go anywhere and again the plot is already entirely revealed on the back cover.

    I had a hard time putting this down. It picks up right where the first one left off. It is one of the most seamless transitions I have read recently between novels. We are still in the woods and get to find out the fate of Ki. But then we spend the next 100 pages doing nothing but talking. There are some battle scenes and some action towards end but ugh it took a while to get there but still I read eagerly waiting. However the plot was very predictable especially given that it is given away on the back of the book.

    The characters are amazing and complex. There is such depth of character to really dive into who these people are. A lot of this book focuses on Tobin’s internal struggle and expected behaviors or gender, wealth, status, etc. I really love the characters.

    The world building is still wonderful and we go a bit further into the prophecies in this one. Of course there is a new prophecy to follow.

    Overall it was good, but I actually need a break. I will continue the series but I need something faster pace for a bit.

  • Sandra

    Maybe it's because I don't have to listen to that annoying narrator who weights every word with unnecessary significance as I'm reading this one, but many of the problematic elements such as clunky writing have disappeared in this second book. Since it was a holiday I spent the whole day reading and stayed up late, late, late reading it. The plot was nicely carried along and if the whole business of cutting a bone from one's side and peeling off one's skin in a ball of fire is a leetle bit over the top, and the gullibility of the minions watching all of this and then giving obeisance to their queen is a little much to ask in the vein of believability, still it was exciting enough to keep me reading until the sand on my eyeballs demanded bed.

    So now what? Brother is gone, Lhal is gone, Iya is about to be gone.... will Tamir and Ki fall in love? Will the queen bring prosperity to Skala?

  • Sandi

    Though not quite as good as
    The Bone Doll's Twin,
    Hidden Warrior is still engaging. My only complaint is that it went on about two hours longer than it should have. There was a perfect ending point to this second installment of The Tamir Triad about 10-15 chapters before it actually ended. The ending should have been the beginning of #3.

    As with the first installment, the narration is excellent.

  • Illuminated

    Fantasy novel, fast paced reading, but sadly missing any substantial depth both in character and in plot. Considering the gender change this book is centred around I would've expected more angst (off the battlefield). Or humour.

    I expected more from the book, though I shouldn't have, I guess. As a thirteen year old I would've been satisfied. Now, I am not so excited.

  • Jiny S

    The second book is definitely slower than the first, as with most trilogies. The story line is still fast and dramatic, but it lacked the chilling allure that made the first book so exhilarating. The ending is satisfactory even with the little cliff hanger the author throws in in the last chapter. As I proceed to the last book, I wonder what else is there to talk about.