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The Chameleon with a Sword by B.L. Logan
The Chameleon with a Sword by B.L. Logan












The Chameleon with a Sword by B.L. Logan

For example, the author calls one woman “Lord Kamare,” but Leena (and all other women I can recall reading about in the story) is called “Lady Niran,” yet there is no explanation for the distinction, which just made it kind of weird. And I understand wanting to step outside of social norms to differentiate your fantasy world from reality, but when no reason is given for making a change, it just leads to awkwardness and confusion. There are a number of territories in this kind-of-dystopian world, and the author drags us through them, but the information we learn along the way turns out to be mainly superfluous and doesn’t have much of a bearing on the overall storyline. It seemed dystopian at first, but then Leena ends up in the oddly peaceful suburbs, where she is dumped into more of a fantasy world with confusing magic. The author built an incredible world, but that world-building was also confusing at times. It took me forever to get through this story, mainly because I found myself getting lost in obscure things that in the end were really not all that important and missing bits that could have helped me make sense of the story. The main reason I am not super excited about it is that I felt it could have been condensed or even split up into a duology. So, I liked this book, but I can’t say that I loved it. With a bounty on her head, Leena must decide what she’s willing to sacrifice to protect herself, her dreams, her family, her world.

The Chameleon with a Sword by B.L. Logan

Leena’s safety becomes the duty of another protector, but her fate is her own. By a government, a king, and a vengeful exiled prince seeking salvation for the illness killing his people.

The Chameleon with a Sword by B.L. Logan

Suddenly, a nomadic fencer finds herself wanted. The sum of Day and Night-two ancient energy forces a king must keep in balance or risk blending life and death in a cataclysmic melee. A people synonymous with betrayal because of him. Traitors.Ī word once signifying respect and honor in Prince Mordecai’s homeland. A people who decided her destiny, but don’t even know she exists. Nox.

The Chameleon with a Sword by B.L. Logan

Logan’s cinematic YA fantasy debut introduces a lush and diverse world of magic, royalty, adventure and loyalty-perfect for fans of Children of Blood and Bone, Graceling and the Throne of Glass series.Ī word that slices fear through sixteen-year-old Leena Niran the way her sword does enemies.














The Chameleon with a Sword by B.L. Logan