Tuesday, August 5, 2025

Reader's Review: "Selkie's Song" by Kimberly A. Rogers


Synopsis from Amazon:

A selkie’s song can enchant a man and tame the sea . . .

Naia’s unusual love for human things led her to become the sole artisan in her clan. But when this passion leads to her abduction, she loses more than contact with the sea when her pelt is taken. Unable to shift forms or return to the sea without it, she knows she will die if she cannot recover the pelt soon. Cut off from her family, Naia must appease the human king while persuading his lovesick son to honor past arrangements.

Malik has loved and lost before, an experience leading him to shy away from love. When Naia is stranded, however, he risks everything to find her. Together they uncover a plot that would sweep up humans and selkies alike in a war that would destroy the Five Kingdoms and possibly all of Sonera.

When the enemy acts, can they save sea and land . . . and each other?

>>>>>>>>>>>

My Review:

Kimberly Rogers is an author I've followed since the early days of this blog. I read her Therian Way series (currently being updated to get included into her Rogue Spotter Universe) and quickly got OBSESSED with the main pairing and absolutely devoured her storytelling voice. I find her books enthralling and her characters so charming and her plots are absolutely riveting.

Her magical take on the Little Mermaid is no exception!

Naia the middle daughter of three sisters, dismissed as a "runt" and "too human" in her looks. Since they are Selkies, not mermaids, there is a lot less stake in the transformation, in fact they really only wear their seal-pelts in cases of swimming long distances or quicker than they could be in their human forms. But even in their human forms, they must always keep their pelts nearby, because if anything happened to the pelt, it could be fatal.

Naia can use her apparent mundanity to her advantage, withdrawing from her younger sister's overt flirtatious behavior around good-looking Selkie males, and dreaming of one day being recognized for her skill in artistry, particularly jewelry-making and gardening. Then one day she is dancing on the shore with her sisters, and a pair of strange humans discover them almost at the same time as a sea serpent attacks the girls onshore. Her sisters end up being able to escape, but Naia is injured and before she can retrieve her pelt, one of the men takes it, and the man that carries her off the beach happens to be the crown prince. Naia and her pelt are separated, and the prince seems to know a thing or two about Selkie myths: namely that their voice is enchanting and he is smitten by her beauty, insisting that she stay in the castle until she can learn to requite his adoration!

My favorite part of this novel was that it wasn't wholly a Little Mermaid retelling, but there were enough subtle hints and references to it, in and around more Selkie-centered lore and some unique twists that expanded the tale and raised the stakes more than just "fall in love in three days or lose your human legs forever." Naia doesn't trade her voice away, but she is so pained at losing her pelt that she does spend a long while without speaking. Her father isn't the ruler of the Selkie kingdom, but he is certainly high-ranking in the community, such that the Great Selkie will visit the family, much to the delight of her overly-sociable sister. When Naia is taken away, he comes ashore to seek after her well-being, but neither is able to rectify the situation without knowing who has taken Naia's pelt and hidden away, why they took it, and where it might be.

I love all the imagery in this book, I felt Naia's longing every time she thought of swimming while she didn't have her pelt, and every wholesome moment between characters was delightful. I would definitely give Selkie's Song a full *****5 STAR***** rating, and add in the Upstream Writer Certified WHOLEHEARTEDLY RECOMMENDED. This book is wonderful for those who enjoy clean, well-written fairy tale retellings with light romance and plenty of peril along the way--and great news, it's only the first in a whole series of these retellings called Love's Enchanted Tales, and I definitely will want to read more of them!


Further Reading: (Also By The Author/Clean Reads/Superb World-Building/Fairy Tale Retellings)
The Therian Way--Kimberly Rogers
       -Leopard's Heart 
       -Wolf's Path 
       -Tiger's Shadow
Rogue Spotter Universe--Kimberly Rogers
Verona: The Complete Mermaid Tales--Pauline Creeden
       -Scales 
       -Submerged 
       -Salt 
       -Surfacing 
Talented Series--Amy Hopkins
     -A Drop of Dream 
     -A Dash of Fiend 
     -A Splash of Truth 
     -A Promise Due 
The Chronicles of Lorrek--Kelly Blanchard
        -Someday I'll Be Redeemed 
        -I Still Have A Soul 
        -I'm Still Alive 
        -Do You Trust Me? 
        -You Left Me No Choice 
        -They Must Be Stopped 
        -Find Me If You Can 
        -You're Not Alone 
The Fair Folk Chronicles--Jeffrey Cook and Katherine Perkins
        -Foul is Fair 
        -Street Fair 
        -A Fair Fight 
        -All's Fair 
The Bhinian Empire--Miriam Forster
     -City of A Thousand Dolls 
     -Empire of Shadows
Wonderland Guardian Academy Series--Pauline Creeden
       -Red The Wolf Tracker 
       -Belle The Beast Tamer