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  • Warrior of the Wild
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Customer reviews

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Warrior of the Wild

Warrior of the Wild

byTricia Levenseller
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Top positive review

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Jessica S.
VINE VOICE
4.0 out of 5 starsAn Intriguing and Gripping Read!
Reviewed in the United States on February 26, 2019
If you love Tricia Levenseller's Daughter of the Pirate King, you're going to love Tricia's next heroine as she's a tough as nails warrior woman! Warrior of the Wild is Tricia's standalone novel that follows Rasmira, the only female warrior in her village and when she's betrayed by people she thought she knew, she finds herself outcast from her village with an impossible task set before, she should want to seek redemption. This was a fast paced story filled with adventure, surprises galore, and MONSTERS!

Rasmira is the only female warrior in her village and she's been trained to follower in her father's, the leader of the village, footsteps. But when she and the other warrior trainees take their final test to prove themselves, Rasmira finds out she has been betrayed by the people she thought she knew. It's not long into the story when we find Rasmira being outcast into the wilds. She's give an impossible task known as a mattugr that basically sets her up for failure in its impossibility. The task? To kill the god that has been terrorizing their villages for years.

I was quite surprised that once Rasmira is on her way to her seclusion in the wilds that she encounters two other outcast teens. At the same time, I was actually hoping for something like this to happen because I couldn't imagine reading a 300+ page book about a heroine who didn't get to interact with anyone other than monsters and the god she is tasked with killing. She meets Soren and Irik, two boys who failed their final tests and have their own impossible mattugrs ahead of them. While Rasmira is loathed to let herself trust again, she finds herself doing just that with these boys. They discover that if they have any hope of returning to their homes, they will have to learn to work together.

I quite enjoyed Rasmira's interactions with Soren and Irik! And never fear, there is no love triangle here as Irik is already spoken for! But that leaves Soren up for grabs! Soren is the first to "fall," yet Rasmira isn't about to let her heart get broken again and constantly shuts down Soren's attempts. It was rather realistic to see Rasmira being unwilling to trust Soren whatsoever. The way that she was betrayed would definitely leave its scars on you and trusting again wouldn't be easy. But as you can imagine, that begins to change, ever so slowly, over the course of the novel.

I really enjoyed Rasmira's character. She wasn't perfect, she had her flaws, but I really liked that she began to learn that about herself and slowly change (in the right ways) to become a better person. She wasn't horrible mind you, but there were little things that get pointed out to her eventually and though it's never stated, you can clearly see her trying to be better.

The ending was quite amazing! I loved everything that led up to it and then the grand finale itself! The story leaves us in the perfect place too! It's the way I prefer my series (and standalones) to end! Warrior of the Wild has a lot going for it! It's action packed, there's MONSTERS, seriously scary and deadly monsters, romance, humor, shocking surprises, and growth from lessons learned. It was thought provoking in a roundabout way.

There were only a few minor things that bugged me about this. Nothing too extreme, but I feel like I can't say with confidence that it was a flawless read. Sure there were times when I didn't agree with Rasmira's choices, but I feel like that's typical of any book because if she made the choices I wanted her to go for, there wouldn't be a story! Lol. Perhaps I just needed more to the story as well. Just the simple MORE. I think if there was just a little something more to it I would be all over giving this one five stars. It's still a tremendously worthy story that I still highly recommend! It's definitely different from my usual fantasy reads and I really loved the warrior woman vibe it had going! This is a story not to be missed!

Overall Rating 4/5 stars
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Top critical review

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Azia
3.0 out of 5 starsA Fun and Quick Adventure
Reviewed in the United States on December 3, 2019
I enjoyed Levenseller’s Daughter of the Pirate King duology, mostly for its adventurous spirit and spunky characters. However, I can’t say that I was incredibly impressed with the author’s writing style. It was simple, though it served its purpose. The events in that series were intriguing enough to hold my attention, so much so that I could overlook the average writing, and I can say much the same for Warrior of the Wild.

The author’s descriptions of the landscape and of certain occurrences lack visual and emotional impact. Any authenticity relating to Norse mythology is sorely missed and her world-building suffers from lack of detail and sometimes her descriptions of characters and their actions fall prey to clichés. For example, the villain whipping his cape out behind him as he turns away and retreats… And her simple writing sometimes devolves into something more juvenile, especially where romance is concerned. That being said, this book is still very entertaining due to its strong female protagonist and intense action sequences.

Rasmira is very likable as a female lead. Though not extremely ground-breaking as a character, Rasmira still shines as a capable, smart, and changeable heroine. In the beginning, she is quite ignorant, but following a particular deceptive incident, she becomes jaded and expresses her vulnerabilities frequently thereafter. As the story goes on, the author inspires messages of self-confidence, self-worth, and individual healing through Rasmira’s journey. And by the end, Rasmira is newly invented and ready to face the world.

I appreciated the time the author took to allow Rasmira to recover from the betrayal of supposed loved ones. Her distrust of a new love interest lasts a while and it was refreshing to see a female protagonist not immediately swoon and fall for the charming, handsome boy who comes to save the day. However, the push-pull connection between Rasmira and her new love interest is jeopardized when their dynamic pulls a 180° and declines into an immediate, sugary romance.

To offset the romantic scenes are the bits of action, which were well-written and fast-paced. The final battle was imbued with a good bit of mystery and suspense to keep you captivated to the very end. The villain, however, was laden with tropes and held lackluster ambitions. Because of Levenseller’s delivery, the majesty of the “god” was very disappointing, but the conclusion to his story was satisfying, at least.

In the end, Warrior of the Wild is a fun and quick adventure. It’s that type of story that you could reread in your spare time and not be afraid to invest too much in the story and its characters.
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3 people found this helpful

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From the United States

Anna M
2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing
Reviewed in the United States on March 19, 2019
Verified Purchase
Let me start off by saying that I adored her other two books and loved her writing style. That being said, sadly, this book fell flat. Gone are the witty one liners, vibrant characters, and interesting storylines. This book is very predictable, boring, and the main character is one dimensional. The love interest is the only truly likable character but even he was a bit dull. The “villain” of the story wasn’t even in the story very much and the whole thing was muddled and left me wondering what just happened haha. I forced myself to finish the book and found myself rolling my eyes at the dialogue and plot every two pages. This is the first time I have ever given two stars in a review and it pains me to do it to an author that I have enjoyed, but unless it’s on sale for $1.99, I would not bother buying it. If you haven’t read her other books, I suggest you skip this one and read those instead! I’m baffled at how people can give this one a good review, I hope her next one is better.
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Phoenix Potter
2.0 out of 5 stars Damaged printed copy
Reviewed in the United States on February 19, 2021
Verified Purchase
This is not a review on the book itself. I already have read and own this book but bought one for a gift for a friend. This is a review on the copy i received. The cutting of the book pages is terrible! The bottom pages are jagged like they didnt cut the bottom of it off during print. It is just a terrible copy and print!
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Phoenix Potter
2.0 out of 5 stars Damaged printed copy
Reviewed in the United States on February 19, 2021
This is not a review on the book itself. I already have read and own this book but bought one for a gift for a friend. This is a review on the copy i received. The cutting of the book pages is terrible! The bottom pages are jagged like they didnt cut the bottom of it off during print. It is just a terrible copy and print!
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Carina's Books
2.0 out of 5 stars Ended up being so disappointing to me.
Reviewed in the United States on February 26, 2019
I felt so sure I would enjoy this book. And the fact that I did not is breaking my heart a little. That cover is gorgeous. And this story sounded interesting and exciting. Sadly, it was none of those. At least not for me. And so I have to give this one two stars. It was almost three, but I did not like it that much, I'm sorry to say. Sigh.

There is so much I feel like sharing about this book. And I do not think much of it will be positive. Will simply share all my thoughts about this book. And I have many of those. I really liked the first book by this author, even read it twice. But her second book was also a two star for me. I wish this had been better, but it was not.

Will begin by saying that I did not like the writing. At all. I tried to grow used to it, to start enjoying it, but it never happened. Oh. It bothered me from start to finish. I was not able to connect to the characters. Did also not manage to visualize most of this world either. Which was disappointing. It also annoyed me greatly that there was no empty line between when the character falls asleep or days go by, or things like that. It made sure that I lost focus on the story many times, because it happened so often, and so abrupt. Sigh. The writing wasn't terrible, truly. It was just not for me. Not at all. I really wish I had been able to love this book. I really wanted to. As I do adore this author. And Warrior of the Wild looked so very gorgeous. But ended up being not for me at all.

This book tells the story of Rasmira. She is the youngest of six siblings, all girls, born to the village leader. He has been raising her to be a warrior, like the men, to be able to take over as the leader after him. She is the best at training, the best with an ax. She is close with her sisters, but not with her mother. She also has no friends. Except for this one boy that started being nice to her six weeks ago. She truly hopes for more between them, and it seems like he wants this too. Until be betrays her just a short time later. Sigh.

At the biggest thing that happens to young people in this world, when they take a test to finally become a real warrior. This boy makes sure that Rasmira fails her test. And because of this, she is banished. And faced with the task of killing a god that lives in the forest, which is a death sentence. This whole beginning was pretty messy. Yet interesting too. I did like getting to know Rasmira. She was interesting, most of the time. But she did not question this boy at all, and that hurt my heart a little bit. How easy she was fooled.

I would not consider this to be too big of a spoiler, as it happens early in the book, and it is what gets this book started. Something that bothered me a lot, however, is that Rasmira let what happened with the boy bother her too much. And for too long. Worse things could have happened to her with this boy. She felt a bit over dramatic. But I also somewhat understood her too. Anyway. She is banished. Spends a few days on her own. Until she ends up meeting a boy almost dead in the forest. He lives there with another one.

We get to know these two boys a lot. They have been banished for a year now, with tasks of their own. I did grow to care so much for Soren. And I did ship them a whole lot. But did not feel any sparks. Probably because of how badly she treated him at times. It wasn't too horrible, but it bothered me. Oh, well. I have shared enough of this book now. Something that I did like, however, was all the different creatures in this book. I wish they had been more detailed, and more scary, but I liked reading about them. I wanted more.

This book is about Rasmira surviving out in the wild. With two other boys. About her learning to do things, learning a whole bunch of things. While also trying to figure out how to kill a god. And helping these boys with their missions too. While I did not love this book, I did find parts of it to be interesting. I liked reading about the creatures. Was curious about the world. But sadly did not love the characters. At all. Liked them sometimes. But they felt silly most of the time, and felt like the girl was too much. Do wish I had loved her.

Another thing that truly bothered me about this book was that I was never sure what time period it was supposed to be set in. The past? The future? It was impossible to tell. It did not feel like a book from the past at all. It seemed like they all lived as in the past, but none of them behaved like it. As this book was simply not written in a way that made it seemed like it was set in the past. Not with how the main girl was talking and thinking. That bothered me through the whole book, to be honest. I wish it had been clearer.

Huge thank you to the publisher, Feiwel & Friends, for the approval to read this one early as an eARC via Netgalley. I am glad I had the chance to read this one, despite not liking it much. I'm still unsure if I will be buying the hardcover or not. I do want the print ARC for my collection, however. Hmm. Sadly do not think I will ever read this book again. But I'm also glad that I gave it a try, that I managed to finish it. Although this book was not for me, I'm positive that many others will love it. Curious to see what you all think of it.

---

This review was first posted on my blog, Carina's Books. I read this book in December 2018.
3 people found this helpful
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Amazon Customer
2.0 out of 5 stars Ummmm.... no. On so many levels.
Reviewed in the United States on January 17, 2022
I was so excited to read this--waited weeks to get it after having it on hold at the library. The premise sounded so original. Aaaaaand it was the biggest disappointment I have ever had when it comes to books. The writing was boring, flat, basic. The writing alone was hard to get past--it was a big turn off for me. The author kept telling you, but never showing you. The main character was always going on about how she was the best, and then saying she hated it, and then saying how hard she'd worked to be the best, and the whining about it. So much of the combat was waaay too unrealistic, and I don't even usually notice/or care about that part, but it was too glaringly obvious. The character building was pretty bad too. The author would say one character was a certain way, and then they would proceed to act completely different than that. And it was that way with a lot of the characters. The main character was petty and brash, and you wanted to feel bad for her because the circumstances were rough, but you couldn't quite work up the pity for her because she was awful. Also, one of the side characters is gay, and maybe you enjoy reading that sort of thing, but I do not. The only good thing I can say about this book is that some of the monsters/world building were interesting. I tried so hard to like it, I really wanted to like it, but I couldn't even get a third the way through the book before deleting it. It was that bad.
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Kibby
2.0 out of 5 stars Did not work for me
Reviewed in the United States on July 31, 2019
Actual rating 1.5 stars.

This book did not work for me. All the hype and promotion I've read about it says this is a feminist book with a fierce female main character. I think maybe we read different books? Because there was nothing fierce about Rasmira IMO. She was the equivalent of a rich white girl who excels at a school sport and receives nothing but praise because her parents are donors to her private school. And I'm sorry, but there is nothing fierce and warrior like about obsessing over kissing a boy ON PAGE 2 of your story! Warrior women can want romance too, but the way Rasmira is written makes her sound whiny and childish (I believe she is supposed to be 18 in this but she sounds like a 12 year old).

The world building is pretty weak and the side characters are wooden. The villain of the story was just okay, though I did enjoy certain revelations about him. And then there is "The Wild". As stated in the synopsis, Rasmira is banished to the wild and it's made to sound like some hellish landscape. But it's just a forest. Yes, there are monsters but they only seem to come out when its convenient to the plot.

At the end of the day, a pretty disappointing read for me.

This book was sent to me by the publisher per my request. I chose to review it on my own and all views and opinions expressed are my own and are not influenced.
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YA Reader
2.0 out of 5 stars Unoriginal
Reviewed in the United States on February 28, 2019
If you want a Viking book, read something else. Try Sky in the Deep. This is a romance, not a fantasy.
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From other countries

glocip
2.0 out of 5 stars Overall: Disappointing
Reviewed in Canada on January 15, 2021
Verified Purchase
The premise of the novel drew me in. I started off very excited and ended with me rolling my eyes way too often.

The world, in my opinion, is just not flushed out. Yes, there may be a lot of details and names and gruesome creatures; but they’re just a bunch of random puzzle pieces that haven’t been fitted together yet. If a creature is a myth in the village, but suddenly pops up a days travel away, how is it a myth? Especially if it’s foot falls are as loud and earth shaking as described.

And even then, the description of some things were so bare minimum it was hard to create the scene. It was like all the effort went to describing these beasts, but honestly I would have been more surprised if she described something as having fur or scales over what was given in the novel.

The “fight” scenes were so horribly cliché. The inspiration of them seeming to come from animated shows or dramatic movies instead of proper and practical combat. Summersaults and cape flips? In my axe fight? No thank you...

The character development is so small and it feels like it only happens because it should happen at that point even though there was nothing to show or trigger it.

The romance story is so completely unneeded.

The only “Viking” influence I see in this is are the axes, battle cries, and the few Faroese-inspired words.

This was my first introduction to the author and despite all the praise I saw for this book and the praises of her other books, I don’t think I’ll be going to check anything else from her.
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Angelique
2.0 out of 5 stars Teleurstellend
Reviewed in Germany on August 9, 2019
Verified Purchase
Zwaar beschadigd. Als boekenliefhebber is dit een steek in je hart... Gelukkig bied Amazon goede oplossingen
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Angelique
2.0 out of 5 stars Teleurstellend
Reviewed in Germany on August 9, 2019
Zwaar beschadigd. Als boekenliefhebber is dit een steek in je hart... Gelukkig bied Amazon goede oplossingen
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JVT
2.0 out of 5 stars Leider sehr enttäuschend
Reviewed in Germany on March 1, 2019
Verified Purchase
Es tut mir regelrecht weh Tricia Levenseller nur 2 Sterne zu geben, vor allem weil ich mich nach ihrer großartigen ersten Buchreihe wirklich auf Warrior of the wild gefreut habe...
Leider mochte ich die Protagonistin nicht gerne ,sie hat sich pausenlos nur über ihr Leben beschwert, und Soren war als Charater zwar okay, aber war gefühlt nur nett, zu nett um glaubhaft zu sein. Auch die Grundgeschichte an sich konnte mich nicht fesseln, ich war beim Lesen gelangweilt und musste mich zwingen zuende zu lesen.
Ich werde weitere Bücher der Autorin auf jeden Fall lesen, in der Hoffnung, diese werden ähnlich grandios wie ihr Debüt. Warrior of the wild hingegen werde ich aus meinem Gedächtnis streichen.
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