A Crane Among Wolves

AN INSTANT NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER!
AN EDGAR AWARD NOMINEE

June Hur, bestselling author of The Red Palace, crafts a devastating and pulse-pounding tale that will feel all-too-relevant in today’s world, based on a true story from Korean history.

Hope is dangerous. Love is deadly.

1506, Joseon. The people suffer under the cruel reign of the tyrant King Yeonsan, powerless to stop him from commandeering their land for his recreational use, banning and burning books, and kidnapping and horrifically abusing women and girls as his personal playthings.

Seventeen-year-old Iseul has lived a sheltered, privileged life despite the kingdom’s turmoil. When her older sister, Suyeon, becomes the king’s latest prey, Iseul leaves the relative safety of her village, traveling through forbidden territory to reach the capital in hopes of stealing her sister back. But she soon discovers the king’s power is absolute, and to challenge his rule is to court certain death.

Prince Daehyun has lived his whole life in the terrifying shadow of his despicable half-brother, the king. Forced to watch King Yeonsan flaunt his predation through executions and rampant abuse of the common folk, Daehyun aches to find a way to dethrone his half-brother once and for all. When staging a coup, failure is fatal, and he’ll need help to pull it off—but there’s no way to know who he can trust.

When Iseul's and Daehyun's fates collide, their contempt for each other is transcended only by their mutual hate for the king. Armed with Iseul’s family connections and Daehyun’s royal access, they reluctantly join forces to launch the riskiest gamble the kingdom has ever seen:

Save her sister. Free the people. Destroy a tyrant.

Also by June Hur:
The Silence of Bones
The Forest of Stolen Girls
The Red Palace

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368 pages

Average rating: 7.43

7 RATINGS

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Community Reviews

Anonymous
Nov 28, 2024
6/10 stars
As a lover of history, to have read a book written so closely to the truth of the tyrant king's reign was an amazing chance I am grateful for. I get to enjoy a story that is fiction, but also learn what it was like for the common people who were led by someone who cared nothing for them. But why the 3 stars? I'm not entirely sure myself, only that this book doesn't prompt me to want to seek other books written by this author (although I already have another one of hers in my TBR, shelved way before I read this). Not sure if it's the writing style? Plot is decent. The romance build-up needs work. It might just be me but I feel the characters need more depth, although the author does have backstories for all of them.

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