
As for the romance, you’ll just have to read the book. Eona isn’t accustom to being on horseback, so when the prince tells her shell get use to riding in a couple days, she spits out, “A few more day and I’ll be dead of arse pain.” Then she promptly clamps her hand over her mouth in embarrassment.


It also has more humor and romance than the first book. Eona must not just survive Sethon’s army, but also very likely storms.Įona starts out kind of slow, but gets progressively more riveting as it goes along. But, even if she can rescue Lord Ido from Sethon’s prison, will she be able to convince him to teach her the way of the Dragoneye? With most of the Dragoneyes gone, the weather is out of control. He is in the clutches of Lord Sethon, who is the evil brother of the previous Emperor. Ido’s dragon is the dragon of ambition, and indeed Ido’s ambitions have gotten him in a jam. Faced with more troubles ahead, and unable to control her power, how will she prevail? And, being one of the two Dragoneyes left, she must rescue Lord Ido, who is the other Dragoneye.

Based on the ancient lores of Chinese astrology and Feng Shui, The Two Pearls of Wisdom and its sequel The Necklace of the Gods are compelling novels set in a world filled with identities, dangerous politics and sexual intrigue.The second book opens after Eon reveals that she is really Eona. Quickly learning to navigate the treacherous court politics, Eon makes some unexpected alliances, and a deadly enemy in a Dragoneye turned traitor. The Emperor immediately summons Eon to court to protect his son and heir. Eon's unprecedented display of skill at the Dragoneye ceremony places him in the centre of a power struggle between the Emperor and his High Lord brother. Eona becomes Eon, and a dangerous gamble is put into play. Because females are forbidden to practise the Art, Eona endures years of study concealed as a boy.

He is really Eona, found by a power-hungry master of the Dragon Magic in a search for the new Dragoneye. Eon is a potential Dragoneye, able to manipulate wind and water to nurture and protect the land.
