
The Serpent and the Wolf
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Narrated by:
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Jesse Vilinsky
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By:
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Rebecca Robinson
About this listen
Perfect for fans of Raven Kennedy and Thea Guanzon, Rebecca Robinson’s thrilling romantasy debut combines high-stakes political intrigue and a steamy, slow-burn, enemies-to-lovers romance.
All her life, Vaasa Kozár has been sharpened into a blade.
After losing her mother—her only remaining parent—to a mysterious dark magic that has since awakened within her, Vaasa is certain death looms. So is her merciless brother, who aims to eliminate Vaasa as a threat to his crown. In one last political scheme, he marries her off to Reid of Mireh, a ruthless foreign ruler, in hopes that he can use her death as a rallying cry to finally invade Reid’s nation. All Vaasa has to do is die.
But she is desperate to live. Vaasa enters her new marriage with every intent to escape it, wielding the hard-won political prowess and combat abilities her late father instilled in her. But to her surprise, Reid offers her a deal: help him win the votes to rise in power, and she can walk free. In exchange, he will share his knowledge about the dark magic running through her veins—and help keep it at bay.
This proposal may be too good to refuse, yet Vaasa and Reid’s undeniable attraction threatens to break the rules of their arrangement. As her brother’s lethal machinations take form, everything is at stake: Vaasa must learn to trust her new husband, but how can she, especially when their perfect political marriage begins to feel like the real thing?
What a match!
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*****
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That said, I did enjoy the read. The political scheming, the covens and witches, the constant thread of betrayal — it all made for an intriguing plot. A little heavy on the politics at times (you might need to reread a few sections just to keep up), but the worldbuilding was strong enough to hold my attention.
Vaasa… annoyed me. She’s sharp and clever, yes, but she’s also just kind of mean? To everyone? And yet somehow people still fall over themselves to help her. Not sure I buy that, but here we are.
Reid was more compelling, and the enemies-to-lovers dynamic had potential, but it never fully gave what it was supposed to give. The tension was there, the execution — a little undercooked.
The fight scenes were also a bit clunky. Like reading a play-by-play rather than feeling immersed in the action — detailed but in a “I did this, then they did that” kind of way. You’ll know what’s happening, but it’s not going to make your pulse race.
I thought this was a standalone going in… turns out, it’s not. Will I be reading the sequel? Probably. Am I counting down the days until it drops? Not really.
Went in expecting romance. Stayed for the witches, politics, and petty drama.
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