What is Priest of Crowns like mate? The reviews suggest a cross between Wolf Hall and Game of Thrones. Is it one of these you have to read the series to make sense of it?
It's the fourth book in a series that starts with
Priest of Bones, so definitely start there if you are interested.
Overall, I thought that it was a really good series. I've never read the two books you refer to but I know that the writing style is highly praised in these cases. I found this series to be written at a "lower" level but as the series went along, I realised that this was probably deliberate because of the character. Don't get me wrong, it's perfectly readable and I think the author hones his writing skills as he goes through the series.
In fact I've just dig out my review from earlier in the thread:-
Second fantasy on the bounce and another enjoyable tale. This is the first book in the War for the Rose Throne series, and I’ll definitely be buying the next one. This book sat for so long on my “to buy” list and I’d put it off for years because I was in the middle of multiple other fantasy series.
The story concerns Thomas Piety, a man returning from war with his comrades to find that his various underworld businesses have been taken over by a rival gang. Naturally, he sets about taking them back and rebuilding his empire, a task that becomes all the more complicated when he is approached by a Queens’s Man who tells him exactly what he must do and when in order to save his home city of Ellinburg from falling to an enemy force.
The main draw of this book is the voice of the lead character. It is written in first person in the voice of Thomas Piety, who doesn’t use big words and basically tells it like it is. Very similar to the voice of Warden in the
Low Town books by Daniel Polansky, if you’ve read them. This approach is a strength, in that the author gets things across easily and I did enjoy reading the narrative, but at times I found that things seemed to happen a little too easily or quickly. e.g. in one part of the story where they are fighting his rivals, he basically says that his crew turned up and it was butchery – you don’t get much more than that. Arguably, given that this seems to be a written account by Piety (there is frequent use of “as I have previously written”) it just about works.
The other strength is the cast of characters – again, we’re only seeing them through Piety’s eyes, but some strong personalities do come across, and I’d like to know a bit more about Billy the Boy, Old Kurt, Cutter and Bloody Anne in the upcoming instalments.