If you love Vikings, royal families and intrigue set in an icelocked land, you will lap up this suspenseful tale by Matthew J. Kirby (The Clockwork Three).
The king of a Northern land, having refused to marry off his beautiful eldest daughter and deed some of his holdings to a nearby chieftain, is now at war. He sends Harald, his youngest child and heir to the throne, along with Asa, the eldest daughter, and his middle daughter, Solveig, to a remote land to keep them safe. The king also sends a handpicked group to accompany them. As the novel opens, they await supplies before winter freezes out any vessel's passage by water. A ship eventually arrives with the king's personal guard--20 hearty berserkers wrapped in animal skins, led by Hake, a giant to rival Thor, and the king's skald, Alric. When someone poisons the berserkers, everyone suddenly becomes a suspect.
Solveig, the only one of the king's children who feels she has no purpose, narrates the story. At Alric's urging, she begins to cultivate her gift for weaving a tale--and her narrative holds us in her spell. Her recurring nightmare suggests that she may also have the gift of foresight, in addition to her skills as a keen observer and storyteller. Matthew Kirby's story peels away like layers of an onion. Two-thirds of the way into the book, Solveig reveals a structure to the novel that serves a dual purpose. Every piece of this puzzle, infused with Norse lore, fits together. --Jennifer M. Brown, children's editor, Shelf Awareness

