Reviews

The Kingmakers by Susan Griffith, Clay Griffith

jessyhere's review against another edition

Go to review page

adventurous fast-paced

5.0

anzuk's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

You are the empress, but I'm just the Greyfriar, popular elephant-riding hero.”
“No. You're the future King Gareth of Britain.”

First impressions
Sadness. Pure sadness. No more Greyfriar. No more Adele. How am I supposed to go on with my life after this? How??

Long story short
Humans are at war with the vampires and they are losing. Their only hope is Adele's geomancy power which may end the war in their favor. Adele and Gareth's relationship meets a strong barrier since Adele's gift can easily destroy Gareth with one mistimed touch.

The news is finally out that Dmitri, the vampire king, is dead. Desperate times make Gareth be willing to take Cesare's soon to be throne even if it means killing his only brother. The stakes are high and there can only be victory or death.

My thoughts
I like deep stories that are not slow paced. They should be interesting, present inspiring characters and toy with my emotions. I want fresh ideas and intelligence. I want good taste. I want to feel what the characters are feeling. I want to read something memorable. I want to feel proud of holding the book in my hand and recommend it to people who ask me about it. The Kingmakers perfectly satisfied my wishes.

It’s no surprise that I absolutely loved The Kingmakers. I may have been overconfident, but I had a feeling the Griffiths wouldn’t disappoint.

Theoretically, The Kingmakers was supposed to bore me. More than half of the book was about the war between humans and vampires, and I usually get bored by so much politics and strategies. The Kingmakers approaches these points very well, and the authors do a very good job in keeping the story dynamic and very interesting. I wasn’t given even a remote chance to get bored.

The story concluded in a very different way from what I was expecting. I really had a difficult time predicting what was going to happen. In the end, it was a failure from my side. I could not predict much of the story, except the obvious things. This is a very good thing because I hate it when books get too predictable. The ending was perfect for every character except perhaps Anhalt. I felt bad about what happened to him. I won’t tell you more because that will spoil the story.

After reading Mamoru’s story I understand his actions, and what he is doing can be considered normal for his situation. Of course this does not justify his actions, but it all makes sense now. This is another thing I love about the Griffiths. Their characters feel real and their actions always make sense.

I am absolutely happy because Adele and Gareth got a happy ending. I was extremely worried that the Griffiths will go for a tragic ending and make Gareth sacrifice himself for Adele. This did not happen, thank goodness. There were lots of things left out in the end, but this did not bother me. I like to think that this was done on purpose, and that the authors’ next project will involve Simon. I’d really love to have a series focused on him once he comes of age to rule the empire. Maybe then we’d have more glimpses of Gareth and Adele, and maybe we’ll get more bits and pieces regarding their future. If the Griffiths don’t go for it, I won’t be mad. I’ll just compose a decent ending for Gareth and Adele in my mind, and live with it.

Speaking of Gareth and Adele’s relationship, The Kingmakers had many cute moments, especially from Gareth’s side. The opera scene, when he was so excited over the play. The moment when Adele showed him the Alexandrian Library. And my favorite scene, when Gareth made tea and boiled eggs for Adele.



I did not expect any of these things from Gareth. Cuteness overload!

The Epilogue made me cry. Not because it’s painful or bad, I already told you that Gareth and Adele get a happy ending. It's because it was extremely emotional and sweet. I don’t usually get teary eyed over these things, but Gareth and Adele grew on me over the time I’ve read their books, and now I see them as some people I know that finally got what they deserved. I also cried because, theoretically, I won’t be reading anything for these two anymore. I’m saying “theoretically” because I’m still hoping that Simon’s book will be out one day.

The following quote was in the book, after the Epilogue.
CLAY AND SUSAN GRIFFITH were married at Greyfriars Kirk in the shadow of Edinburgh Castle. That's why these books exist.

You need to finish the book in order to get why I liked it so much. This is an extremely sweet fact that changed the way I see Clay and Susan Griffith.

The Kingmakers is everything I wanted from a conclusion to Vampire Empire and more. It's a masterpiece, and I cannot find words strong enough to express how much I loved it. I need more than the mere five-star rating for this book.



A short conclusion
The Kingmakers is a beautiful love story coated by adventure, tragedy and sacrifice. It is the perfect conclusion to a series that is a true work of art. I strongly recommend it to those who like to read complex, action-filled stories that revolve around memorable characters that will leave you breathless.

Favorite quote
In four hundred years he had never loved anyone like he loved her. There was no logic, no rational explanation save who she was. He would never find her equal again, and he knew it. He would live and die beside her. Whatever happened in the future, his calendar now matched hers, no matter what.

Review also posted on

kirby2002's review against another edition

Go to review page

2.0

3.5 stars.

rora114's review against another edition

Go to review page

2.0

I had planned to start this right after finishing the second book, but I needed a break from the overwhelming "men knowing more than the woman in the story". Even then, I took a long break in between.

It was ok. Interesting take on vampires, but it was only ok. Had to listen to it a 1.5 speed, just to get through it.

amyiw's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

I would've given this a 5 stars but the battle scenes overwhelmed it and slowed it down. About the first 80 pages are located on the battle front and there is just a little movement of the plot. I think they wanted to show how The Greyfriar was in the middle of the action. He says that he is more Garreth now than the Greyfriar as he is back to indiscriminate killing. I think it didn't need so many pages devoted to it, and it was slow and boring. Once the story got out of this it moved along in pace similar to book 2, except for 2 more airship battles that are not as long and not as slow.

The slowness makes this book is not as good as the last and there were too many 'plans' that didn't work correctly. Still, the plot was good, as well as the relationship building. The end was quite satisfactory.

a_chickletz's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

This book suffers from that problem when two characters you want to meet end up getting together and are actually not that interesting when they're together. They become sappy, emotional fools.

Everything else was awesome. But I'm knocking it down two stars because the main characters just became so repetitive with their emotions that I honestly wanted to fast-forward through their scenes.

I think the series would have been better if the two main characters didn't confess their emotions so quickly, or there was some sort of slow-building romance. That's just me.

I don't regret reading the series; it finished quite well.

shoelessgirl's review against another edition

Go to review page

2.0

Meh. I really liked Anhalt and Major Statton (sp? I listened to audiobook), Gareth was okay, and Sanah was interesting. I liked very little else.

saffire_sky's review

Go to review page

  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5


Expand filter menu Content Warnings

dapper's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

This was a decent series and worth the read. I wanted to know what would happen next, which is always good. I had to take the love the two MCs had for eachother at face value because I didn’t feel it for myself. (Honestly, she just laughs at how stupid he is all the time and he just swings a sword)

The good characters all have safety nets, so even though I wanted to know how, I always knew they would get out scot free (a point I realized in the very beginning when Simon was alone with a herd of vamps for mad long after being slammed with supernatural strength against a tree)

What I did like were some of the original or less used concepts in the series (flying vampires are fucking terrifying) MamiRooroo was dope.

Tbh I think Adele and Gareth should have just died together. All the vamps would be dead and Adele wouldn’t have to mourn her bfs death cus hellfire and Gareth wouldn’t have to watch her tiny mayfly life wither but whateverzzz haha

mountainblue's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

I really enjoyed reading [b:The Kingmakers|13417066|The Kingmakers (Vampire Empire, #3)|Clay Griffith|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1343648904s/13417066.jpg|18742039], the conclusion to this brilliant trilogy. I read all three books too fast to do a proper review, since I was desperate to know what happens next but now that I'm finished, can't wait to reread this series, take my time and savour each moment.