The Sin Eater’s Daughter

The Sin Eater’s Daughter
The Sin Eater’s Daughter
The Sleeping Prince
The Scarecrow Queen
Author Melinda Salisbury
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre Young adult fantasy
Publisher Scholastic Press
Published 2015 - current
Media type Print, e-book, audiobook
No. of books 3 novels, one short story

The Sin Eater's Daughter is a young adult fantasy trilogy that was written by Melinda Salisbury and published by Scholastic Press.[1] The first book in the trilogy, The Sin Eater’s Daughter, was published on 24 February 2015 and marked Salisbury's first book in print.[2][3] The second book in the series, The Sleeping Prince, was published the following year along with a short story, "The King of Rats".[4] The final book in the trilogy, The Scarecrow Queen, is slated to release in 2017.

The series follows the character of Twylla, a young girl that is engaged to marry her kingdom's prince, but is shunned due to her ability to kill with only a touch of her hand.

Synopsis

The Sin Eater’s Daughter

Twylla is a teenage girl that is engaged to marry Merek, the prince of Lormere and as such, lives in the castle with him and his mother, the Queen as well as the King, the Queens cousin. This would seem like something she would be happy about, except that Twylla is the embodiment of a goddess and as long as she eats a deadly mixture of her own blood and Morningsbane once a month, is capable of killing a person by just touching them. This isolates her from others around her, especially as she is expected to use her abilities as a death sentence. To everyone exept the royal family her touch is a painful death. She is alone and sad looking to her gods for help until however a new guard arrives, Leif. He and Twylla begin to bond and fall in love - a dangerous move, as the Queen is a murderous and unstable adversary.

The Sleeping Prince

The second book in the series follows Errin, the sister of Lief, one of the protagonists from the prior novel. His disappearance has caused her no end of misery, especially as their mother is very sick and Errin has to resort to illegal measures in order to pay their rent. This last part becomes moot after the Queen launches a war surrounding the Sleeping Prince and Errin loses her home, as her village is forcibly evacuated. Her only solace is Silas, a young man she knows very little about.

Bibliography

  1. The Sin Eater's Daughter (24 February 2015, Scholastic Press)
  2. The Sleeping Prince (31 May 2016, Scholastic Press)
  3. The Scarecrow Queen (TBA 2017, Scholastic Press)

Television adaptation

In April 2016 the independent television company Little Island optioned the Sin Eater's Daughter trilogy with the intent to adapt it for television.[5]

Reception

The New York Times praised the first book in the series for its "well-imagined fantasy world".[6] Common Sense Media rated The Sin Eater's Daughter at three out of five stars, commenting that while the book's writing was strong,they felt that its heroine was overly weak.[7]

MuggleNet reviewed the trilogy's second book, The Sleeping Prince, favorably and wrote that they enjoyed the book's heroine Errin.[8]

References

  1. LucyTheReader (2015-04-11). "What shall I read next? A guide to UKYA". the Guardian. Retrieved 2016-02-16.
  2. Melinda Salisbury (24 February 2015). The Sin Eater's Daughter. Scholastic Incorporated. ISBN 978-0-545-81973-2.
  3. Feay, Review by Suzi (2015-02-13). "'The Sin Eater's Daughter', by Melinda Salisbury". Financial Times. ISSN 0307-1766. Retrieved 2016-08-04.
  4. Melinda Salisbury (4 February 2016). The Sin Eater's Daughter 2: The Sleeping Prince. Scholastic UK. ISBN 978-1-4071-6268-3.
  5. "'Sin Eater's Daughter' optioned for TV". The Bookseller. April 18, 2016. Retrieved 2016-08-04.
  6. Drasek, Lisa Von (2015-05-08). "Gordon Korman's 'Masterminds,' and More". The New York Times. Retrieved 2016-02-16.
  7. Beach, Andrea. "The Sin Eater's Daughter - Book Review". Common Sense Media. Retrieved 2016-08-04.
  8. "Book Review: "The Sleeping Prince" by Melinda Salisbury". MuggleNet. July 11, 2016. Retrieved 2016-08-04.

External links


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