Ratings16
Average rating3.7
Book 1 in the Healer series. Avry of Kazan can heal people by absorbing their wounds and diseases into herself. But Healers like Avry are accused of spreading the plague that decimated the Fifteen Realms, and for this she is hunted. When Avry is abducted by a band of rogues who actually value her gift, their leader is explicit in his demands: Avry must heal a plague-stricken prince--a man she holds responsible for the loss of her family. As they travel closer to a place Avry has no desire to be, she must decide if she will escape, who is worth healing, and what is worth dying for. Because the price of peace may well be her life...
Featured Series
3 primary booksHealer is a 3-book series with 3 primary works first released in 2011 with contributions by Maria V. Snyder.
Reviews with the most likes.
Pros: strong female protagonist, fast paced, lots of plot twists, minor romance elements
Cons: limited emotional punch, simplistic world building
Avry of Kazan is a healer in a post plague world where healers have been hunted and killed for spreading the disease that decimated the populace of the Fifteen Realms. After three years of hiding, her cover is blown when she heals another child. Too ill from the aftereffects of the child's illness (which must be taken into herself in order to heal it) for her to run, she's taken by the authorities and sentenced to death.
Kerrick of Alga finds her there, and frees her with the condition that she heal his friend. But his friend has the plague, and healing it means dying herself.
Touch of Power is reminiscent of Snyder's first novel, Poison Study. The protagonist is a feisty young woman, the romance creeps up on you towards the end (with many clues, but no acknowledgement until the climax), and fast paced story telling with lots of plot twists to keep you turning pages.
Tragedy didn't make my connect with the characters as I would have liked, until the final scene. I wanted to feel their losses as well as their joys, and didn't quite get there.
The world was interesting, some aspects (like the events surrounding the plague and the death lilies) were well detailed and others (differences in customs between Realms) were ignored. In other words, it's a very tight story, with no digressions for elements unconnected to the plot, even if a few side details wouldn't have been amiss.
This somewhat open ended book is a solid beginning to a new trilogy.