Author picture

Kacey Ezell

Author of Noir Fatale

22+ Works 194 Members 18 Reviews

Series

Works by Kacey Ezell

Associated Works

Fantastic Hope (2020) — Contributor — 171 copies, 14 reviews
Black Tide Rising (2016) — Contributor, some editions — 114 copies, 3 reviews
Terra Nova: The Wars of Liberation (2019) — Author — 23 copies, 1 review
World Breakers (2021) — Contributor — 17 copies
The Year's Best Military & Adventure SF, Volume 4 (2018) — Contributor — 16 copies
The Year's Best Military & Adventure SF, Volume 3 (2017) — Contributor — 12 copies
The Gates of Hell (2020) — Contributor — 3 copies
In the Wings: Four Horsemen Sagas, Book 7 (2022) — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1977
Gender
female
Occupations
helicopter pilot
author
Organizations
United States Air Force
Agent
Justin Bell (Spectrum Literary)
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
South Dakota, USA
Associated Place (for map)
South Dakota, USA

Members

Reviews

19 reviews
An excellent quest story in the traditional sense, but with an unconventional twist.

Magelight by Kacey Ezell is an exciting and absorbing fantasy romance presented in a traditional quest format, but with an unconventional reverse harem setup that avoids venturing into intimate territory. The romance is clean and slow-burning, with the main characters invested more in the success of their mission.Aelys of Brionne, the heiress to one of the 20 ruling families in this matriarchal society, is show more graduating from her training as a mage despite her feeble reserve of power, when the man she expects to bond with and join the Imperial Battlemage Corps chooses another. Devastated, she heads to her distant home only to be waylaid by bandits just as she reaches the inn where she’d planned to stop.

Romick, Daen, and Vil had been inseparable boyhood friends before tragedy had orphaned them and scattered them in different directions. Twenty years later, they finally reunite and plan to form a partnership, offering the special skills they had acquired while apart for hire to those who are willing to pay the price. When a young woman is attacked outside the inn where they had met, they leap to her defense. Aelys immediately hires the three to escort her the rest of her way home. But when the bandits return later with reinforcements and try to burn the inn down around the new companions, Aelys tries to save them using her meager power. While successful, in the process, she pulls energy through her new protectors and binds the men to her as well. Now the foursome must make their way to Aelys’s home and confer with her aunt, the most gifted mage of the day, to see if there is a way to dissolve the bond and set the men free.

I enjoyed this book so much! Her horrible family has emotionally beaten down Aelys, and her treatment at the hands of her instructors and fellow students at school has been no better. She starts the story as a pretty pathetic creature and is like a magnet for bad luck. (But there’s more to what’s going on than is initially apparent.) Thankfully, she gradually grows into a more confident young woman over the course of the story.

The author creates interesting and diverse backstories for the three men and skillfully weaves them into the story without overwhelming the reader or diverting significant time from the main plot. All three experienced hardships after they separated as boys, all heartbreaking at times and even shocking. All three struggle with their feelings after they are inadvertently bonded to Aelys, and frequently, those feelings threaten to overcome their bond of brotherhood.

The plot moves at a fast pace, and the lively, interesting multi-viewpoint narrative makes the pages fly by. Several twists in the storyline were really surprising and what they discovered when they finally arrived at Aelys’s home was unexpected. The ending delightfully opens the door for a sequel.

I recommend MAGELIGHT to readers of fantasy, romantic fantasy, and fans of quests.

I voluntarily reviewed this after receiving an Advance Review Copy from the author through Goddess Fish Promotions Book Tours.
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This book, Noir Fatale, is subtitled “The Dark Side of Science Fiction and Fantasy.” I agree there is a lot of Noir, a lot of femme fatale’s, a lot of horror, a lot of fantasy, but very little science fiction. What I was hoping I would read would be short stories along the lines of Richard Morgan’s Takeshi Kovacs series but this is not the case. Since I don’t care for fantasy and horror fiction, I found the book to be flat and extremely underwhelming and the only reason I finished show more reading the book was that I kept hoping I would find at least one short story to my liking. My guess is if the authors collected in this book are among your favorites (which would probably mean you enjoy their excursions into the worlds of fantasy and horror) then you will not be disappointed with what you find. show less
½
Bellatrix Aelys and her guards Romik, Daen, and Vil are trying to figure out who is trying to capture Aelys. They decide to leave and are recruited by one of Aelys's trusted teachers at the Lyceum to travel to Zandrine as escort for her sons Bellator Acten and Ageon Tyrus. She has known both men since her days at the Lyceum.

Aelys, Romik, Daen and Vil are still working out their relationships since Aelys broke the geas that bound the men to her. While she has changed a lot from her wimpy days show more when her magic was secretly bound by her aunt, Aelys still lacks some self-confidence and can't imagine that her warrior, archer, and thief would willingly bind themselves to her.

Their destination - Zandrine - is a city Romik promised himself that he's never return to but a shipwreck caused by storms and dragon attacks makes it necessary. They find a city that is greatly changed since Romik was last there. The empire has outlawed slavery which used to support the games which are the heart of the city's prosperity. The city is trying to find a new stability and a new power structure.

When Romik is forced back into the games to save the son of the man who once owned him, rules mean that Aelys, Vil and Daen are also bound for the arena. They need to reestablish their bonds if they are to survive, but this time Aelys knows that she isn't coercing them in any way. And since the Emperor, in disguise, is present for reasons of his own, Aelys, Romik, Daen and Vil find themselves recruited into his rebellion against his grandmother and her cohort.

This is clearly the middle book in a trilogy. A lot does happen as Aelys grows into herself and her power and the relationship with her protectors is formalized. Nothing more is learned about the person the quartet is running from, but it looks like the next book will find her back within his reach. The story was filled with excellent worldbuilding and lots of excitement. I look forward to reading more.
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MAGELIGHT is the first book in an epic fantasy series. Aelys of Brionne is the daughter of a powerful family. She has the dream of using her magical talent to become a Battlemage for the Empire. However, her weak magic makes that dream impossible. Even though she graduates from the academy, she isn't chosen by the man she wants who picks her best friend instead. The betrayal sends Aelys fleeing for home.

Meanwhile, three men who were best friends as boys, but whose lives have taken different show more paths after their village was destroyed meet again. Romik was first an arena fighter who bought his way out to be a mercenary soldier before growing disenchanted with the life. Daen had become a Forester even though his low birth should have made that career impossible. While he is an exceptional archer, he has never been accepted by his highborn "brothers." Vil has been sold into prostitution in the city but murdered his first customer and escaped. He has made his life as thief in that same city.

The three men meet at a country inn and swear their brotherhood just before Aelys arrives pursued by bandits. They rescue her but find themselves in an inn that has been set on fire by the same bandits. They survive because Aelys is able to form bonds with all three of them which increases her magical power enough to save them. Needless to say, none of the three men are happy or comfortable with the concept of being bound to her.

The story concerns their adventures while bringing Aelys back to her home and with dealing with their new bonds. For the first third of the book, I didn't like Aelys at all. She spent it crying, apologizing, and feeling guilty. However, the men recognized her deep inferiority complex and bolstered her each in their own different ways. They couldn't do much about the guilt though since she knew she should not have bound them to her.

I enjoyed the worldbuilding in the story and the personalities of the main characters. I look forward to reading their further adventures.
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Statistics

Works
22
Also by
8
Members
194
Popularity
#112,876
Rating
3.9
Reviews
18
ISBNs
33

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