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The primary character weirdly devolved through the three books from a kick-ass female protagonist to some kind of really lame romantic heroine. In this, the last of the trilogy, she and others frequently comment or refer to the fact that she's not the one for thinking (she has her men for that!); far from having a will of her own, as she did in the first book, she is routinely tricked into things for her own good; far from being a strong military leader as she was in the first book, by the third book she has to be rescued psychologically, and she is portrayed as having no fighting skills. To the extent her personality is described at all, it's really annoying. wtf? Well, none of the other characters fare much better -- a couple of the male characters are fleshed out a bit more in this book than in the preceding two, but in general the reader gets very little sense in this book why one might care about any of the characters.
Another complaint -- the same-sex erotics that would logically follow from the group marriage, as described in these books are downplayed to the point that one suspects homophobia. The publisher (Luna) is the paranormal romance line of Harlequin, so maybe it's a publisher issue, or maybe just the heteronormativity of the author. Either way the very few nods that Dayton makes to same-sex erotics simply highlight the disparity in treatment.
The plot starts to really wear thin after the same elements are repeated over and over--an attractive man? Who is somehow unacceptable to the group? Why, he must be the next iliasti, and Kallista will have mindblowing sex with him, and then everyone will be happily married. Someone is a jerk? Either they are possessed by demons (that Kallista will get rid of by "pushing" and "shaping" magic) or they're not really a jerk; they just seem that way because of their pride, and really they would make a great co-spouse.
The worldbuilding is indeed interesting, and definitely my favorite part of the books. Although it's a bit depressing to see societies created & then left hanging: "Oh, well, the demons were chased out, so all the bad caste-stuff disappeared, so who knows, maybe our bordering nation's society is better now." What? Doesn't she have spies, or traders, or news, or something? And the iliasti wedding ceremony is somehow logically Not Right. If you marry in, you hand out anklets, but receive bracelets. And that applies to everyone -- everyone hands out anklets. Everyone receives bracelets. Spot the logical problem.
So, in summary, I don't regret reading these books, but can't recommend any beyond the first. (