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Cold Sanctuary

Jake and Emilya are on the run, accused of a crime they did not commit. To stay ahead of Prince Magnus, Jake joins forces with the highwayman Harry Black and flees across Glennad. Emilya, meanwhile, seeks refuge at Kifsel Place Monastery among pacifist monks. Yet even there, danger waits. At the same time, the Theran Empire prepares for Nessemi, a conflict that now feels unavoidable. Emperor Calidius continues to preside over death in the Liatia fighting pits, where Draxaelon, the former Demonacian general, has been cast into peril. With threats closing in from every direction and Nessemi looming over all, survival is far from certain.

Cold Sanctuary, by Andrew Beardmore, is the second book in the Nessemiah series. It occupies a compelling space between fantasy, science fiction, and historical fiction, with echoes of George R. R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire and Frank Herbert’s Dune. The result is ambitious, layered, and expansive.

Readers can grasp the broad shape of the story without having read the first installment, but beginning with book one is strongly recommended. This is a sweeping epic filled with multiple central characters, intricate political currents, and a vast supporting cast. Context matters. Names, loyalties, histories, and conflicts carry weight, and the experience is richer when entered from the beginning.

Beardmore excels at weaving numerous plot threads into a cohesive and absorbing narrative. The world he has created is immersive and impressive in nearly every respect. Many writers build elaborate settings; fewer make those settings feel as though they are recording real events rather than inventing them. Beardmore achieves that rare effect. His characters are richly drawn, their choices shaped by complicated motives, shifting loyalties, and moments of genuine surprise. One of the novel’s greatest pleasures is its unpredictability. The reader is rarely allowed to settle too comfortably, and that uncertainty gives the story much of its force.

The danger is palpable. The shadow of Nessemi is pervasive. The themes feel broad, resonant, and timeless. It is easy to be drawn into this world, and easier still to trust that the story is in the hands of a master storyteller. The only difficult part is waiting for the next chapter in a series that grows grander, stranger, and more elaborate with each return.

Pages: 555 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0F1Z4N1J7

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