Justice of Kings

No cover

Richard Swan: Justice of Kings (2022, Little, Brown Book Group Limited)

English language

Published Sept. 29, 2022 by Little, Brown Book Group Limited.

ISBN:
978-0-356-51640-0
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (8 reviews)

5 editions

Review of 'The Justice of Kings' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

This was way more fun and fast paced than I expected. I had a really good time with this one.

This book combines fantasy with crime fiction/suspense very successfully. It makes a lot of sense that the author is a lawyer. It’s 95% perfectly paced with twists and turns the whole way through. The only place I’d say it drags is in the “court room” piece where Vonvalt summarizes what the reader already knows.

I loved this trio - Helena, Bressinger, and Vonvalt. They cared for one another but also largely respected each other’s competence, which felt cozy in the midst of some dark happenings.

I personally hate an info dumpy fantasy, so the minimal style here worked for me. Vonvalt could easily have provided a clunky lecture on all the powers Justices have, but he doesn’t. I know of some of them but not all because it’s not relevant …

Review of 'The Justice of Kings' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

I really, really wanted to like this book, because medieval fantasy with excellent worldbuilding, an interest in nuance, and female main characters, is incredibly thin on the ground. Regrettably, the writing was just too clunky for me to get into. I don't mean that in the sense of prose, but in the sense of how mood and character was conveyed. The writing would tell me what to feel, rather than having the characters react to it. Despite the book being of a reasonable length to get lots of scenes of characterization, I was instead informed post-hoc what the characters were like. Genuinely disappointing for such a promising premise, with such an interesting focus. I desperately want more books that deal with the (well researched!) intricacies of medieval law, set on the backdrop of a fantasy version of the Carolingian Renaissance, dealing with the politics of warring Germanic city states. Incredibly …

An Incredible Grimdark Detective Tale

5 stars

The Justice of Kings was a surprise hit for me. Biases on the table, I love stories of Warrior-Judges and I expected to enjoy Konrad Volvalt wielding his unlimited authority to deal out justice within the Empire. I wasn't quite sure what else was in store, and I'm impressed with a story that seamlessly flows between a mystery akin to police procedurals as well as that of a treacherous plot rotting out the foundations of power. The worldbuilding is phenomenal, bringing to life the Empire and both how it expands and maintains its authority. Despite spending most of the story on the fringes, we know as much about the institutional pillars of Sova as if the story was all politics in the capital.

Volvalt is the reason why this novel excels though. Written through the eyes of his clerk, we get to learn about this cold, aloof Justice that reports …

avatar for spiralmind

rated it

4 stars
avatar for phraserbrown

rated it

4 stars
avatar for pkraus

rated it

4 stars
avatar for rspavel

rated it

4 stars