Struggles Of A Fallen Queen: The

The queen’s internal monologue is a highlight: she is not always likable. She is proud, sometimes cruel, and haunted by the arrogance that led to her fall. Watching her learn humility—not as a noble lesson, but as a brutal necessity—is devastating and beautiful.

Rating: 4.5/5 Stars

The Struggles of a Fallen Queen is not a comfortable read. It is a book that leaves dirt under your fingernails and a knot in your chest. But it is also a profound meditation on identity: if you are no longer a queen, a mother, a wife, or a conqueror, then who are you? The answer this novel provides is heartbreaking, but it rings true. the struggles of a fallen queen

The middle third of the book sags slightly under the weight of its own misery. A few chapters feel like a repetitive cycle of “hope arises, hope is crushed,” and one subplot involving a secret heir feels like a conventional fantasy trope parachuted into an otherwise subversive narrative. Additionally, the ending—while emotionally resonant—may frustrate readers seeking a cathartic revenge arc. The author chooses realism over spectacle, which is brave but not always satisfying. The queen’s internal monologue is a highlight: she

The characters who orbit this fallen star are equally compelling. There is the cynical mercenary who sees her as cargo, the rival queen who offers a poisoned olive branch, and the loyal handmaiden whose faith becomes a burden rather than a balm. The dialogue crackles with subtext; every conversation is a negotiation for power, even when the queen has none. Rating: 4