I’m happy to help — short and practical: there are several books called 'The Black Queen', so I can’t give a single worldwide publication date without knowing which one you mean. If you tell me the author or upload a photo of the cover, I’ll look up the first-edition imprint date for you. Meanwhile, a quick way to check yourself is to find the copyright page of the edition you have (or the listing on WorldCat or a library catalog) and use the earliest year shown there as the first publication date. If you want, drop the author’s name and I’ll track down the exact date.
I love digging through bibliographic sleuthing, so this question is right up my alley — but I need a tiny detail from you to be precise: which author’s 'The Black Queen' are you asking about? There are multiple novels with that title, and each one has its own publication timeline. Some were published regionally first, others launched simultaneously in multiple countries through a global publisher, and translations can muddy the waters further.
Practically speaking, “first published worldwide” usually means the date of the book’s very first edition release (the date on the first imprint). To confirm that date I check the copyright page, then verify via WorldCat entries, ISBN metadata, publisher press releases, and library catalogs. If you don’t have the author handy, give me any detail you remember — cover color, year you saw it, or a character name — and I’ll narrow it down. If you want to do it yourself, search the title plus “first published” with the author name, then cross-reference the ISBN and OCLC numbers to be sure you’re looking at the original edition.
I get excited whenever someone drops a title like 'The Black Queen' into conversation, because that title has been used by a handful of different books and authors over the years. Right off the bat, I should flag that there isn't a single universally obvious publication date without knowing which author or edition you mean. Some novels with the title 'The Black Queen' were first released decades ago in one country and then reprinted, retitled, or translated elsewhere later on — so “first published worldwide” can be a tricky phrase to pin down.
When I hunt down first-publication info, I flip to the copyright page of the physical book (it usually lists the year and edition), then cross-check with library catalogs like WorldCat, national library records, and the publisher’s site. Goodreads and the author’s website can help, but for a definitive scholarly-style date I prefer ISBN/OCLC data and library records. I once spent a rainy afternoon in a used bookstore tracing the publication path of a similarly confusing title and learned the hard way that paperback reprints and foreign-language editions often create misleading “first published” footprints.
If you tell me the author or even the cover artist, I can narrow it down fast and give you the exact first-publication date and place. Otherwise I can walk you through searching WorldCat/ISBN records to figure out which edition counts as the worldwide first printing — which is surprisingly satisfying when you finally pin it down.
2025-09-02 13:57:48
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The Tyrant king's Queen
symplyanjay
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"Look at me properly and try to remember." He implored her, his silvery eyes boring into hers. Maya raised her nervous eyes to meet his. Searching her head, she tried to remember where she may have met this man before.
As she stared at him, a sense of familiarity began to settle. Those eyes... she'd seen them before. Where has she seen them? One by one, the images came. The pictures from a time she had forgotten. She had helped someone with eyes just like this.
Still in his embrace, a daunting realisation began to set in. She'd met this man before. Long before he even dreamed of being a king...
****************
A tyrant king conquers a kingdom so he can get married to her forgotten princess. People expect a marriage filled with strife and everything but none of that happens. Instead he treats her right, worships her and kisses the very ground she walks on. Why is that? People wonder. The reason is quite simple.
Years ago, the same princess had saved his life from the bitter hands of death when he was betrayed by his half brother, the crown prince of Madonia.
Princess Kiana is forced to marry the ruthless vampire King Idra and becomes the Third Queen in a deadly palace ruled by jealousy and secrets. Surrounded by powerful rivals and haunted by danger, she must survive cruelty, uncover hidden truths, and face a king whose hatred slowly turns into something far more dangerous—desire.
*Book 4*
Isolde's life was full of love and joy. She was set to be High Priestess of the makkari, but everything changed in a single night when she lost everything at the hands of someone she thought she could trust.
For centuries she has been on the run, helping the supernatural community under the cloak of anonymity while she works to clear her name and save the very people after her, from destruction.
Enemies are closing in, but an unexpected complication befalls her when she realises she's been fated to someone who wants her species exterminated. After all, an evil chance seldom comes alone.
A Queen Among Darkness is the fourth book in the Queen Among series. Each story is set up in the previous book, so reading the books in order is recommended. Here are the books in the series:
A Queen Among Alphas - Book 1
Bite-Size Luna - A Queen Among Alphas Prequel
A Queen Among Snakes - Book 2
Runaway Empress - A Queen Among Snakes Prequel
A Queen Among Blood - Book 3
Whole Again - A Queen Among Alpha's spin-off
A Queen Among Darkness - Book 4
Dark Invocation - A Queen Among Darkness spin-off
A Queen Among Tides - Book 5
Valor, Virtue, and Verve - A Queen Among Tides Prequel Spin-off
A Queen Among Gods - Book 6
A Queen Among Tempests - Book 7
She was born a bastard.
They poured wine on her, laughed at her mother’s grave, and thought she’d stay broken.
They were wrong.
Ava Rosier took their scorn, their money, and their men,
one ruthless billionaire, one mafia emperor, and one forbidden brother who shares her blood.
Now the illegitimate daughter sits on the throne they built,
crown forged from their tears,
rose petals dipped in their blood.
Three psychopaths kneel at her feet,
obsessed, ruined, and willing to burn the world for her smile.
She never chose between them.
She chose everything.
This is the rise of the Blackened Queen.
And no one escapes her empire alive.
The Devouring Queen is a paranormal revenge fantasy set between a blood drenched Lycan kingdom and a starving vampire empire, where every moon can crown a monarch or claim a corpse. The story follows Elara, once a gentle Luna who was betrayed and murdered on her wedding night. Instead of finding peace, she awakens three years in the past inside the stolen body of a hidden vampire princess. She returns to life in a world already preparing for her death, because in thirty nights the Lycan King must kill his true mate to awaken an ancient god beast. Now two women wear the same face, and only one can survive the prophecy that hungers for blood.
Elara, reborn as a ghost wearing royal skin, abandons innocence and embraces the power she never had in her first life. With a quiet voice and a predator’s smile, she steps into a kingdom filled with secrets, manipulations and creatures who underestimate her. Cassius, the beautiful and broken Lycan King, is trapped between the woman he once loved, the version he helped destroy, and a prophecy that demands sacrifice. Their love is poisonous, irresistible and destined to end in ruin.
As the nights slip away, Elara weaves a dark game of power and deception. She announces a false pregnancy, visits the chained original bride under midnight moons, and manipulates courts and armies with deadly grace. The mirrors around her begin to bleed, the lies thicken, and the prophecy tightens like a noose.
The climax erupts in a courtyard filled with fallen soldiers, where the two identical brides tear the king apart to decide which destiny will rule. The kingdoms that remain have only two choices: kneel or burn.
*Book 3*
Yildiz was created by the Goddess Zarseti for one purpose: to uphold truth and justice in the supernatural world. Unlike her sisters, Yildiz came into being blind, but she sees beyond what others can.
For tens of thousands of years, she and her sisters continued their duties as the Delegation, but life just got more interesting for Yildiz. She learns her creator blessed her, of all people, with a soulmate – an unwilling soulmate at that.
Darkness surrounds this mystery man, but he is far more than he seems. Yildiz finds herself pushed away at every turn, but she's never been known to give up her pursuits. Will she capture his heart and unravel his secrets? Or will she be consumed by the darkness and left heartbroken?
*Excerpt*
"Is this the part where you say you'd die for me?"
"Death is easy. It's brief and over in an instant, but living? Living is hard and living for eternity is even harder. So no, I won't die for you… I'd live for you."
A Queen Among Blood is the third book in the Queen Among series. Each story is set up in the previous book, so reading the books in order is recommended. Here are the books in the series:
A Queen Among Alphas - Book 1
Bite-Size Luna - A Queen Among Alphas Prequel
A Queen Among Snakes - Book 2
Runaway Empress - A Queen Among Snakes Prequel
A Queen Among Blood - Book 3
Whole Again - A Queen Among Alpha's spin-off
A Queen Among Darkness - Book 4
Dark Invocation - A Queen Among Darkness spin-off
A Queen Among Tides - Book 5
Valor, Virtue, and Verve - A Queen Among Tides Prequel Spin-off
A Queen Among Gods - Book 6
A Queen Among Tempests - Book 7
'The Black Queen' definitely rings a bell. It’s actually the first book in a trilogy called 'The Black Jewels' by Anne Bishop. The world-building is insane—imagine a matriarchal society where power is tied to jewel ranks, and the Queen rules with this eerie, mesmerizing authority. The series gets progressively darker, but in a way that feels organic, not just shock value. Bishop’s writing has this hypnotic quality, like you’re being pulled into a gothic ballad.
What’s wild is how the later books expand the lore without losing that intimate, almost claustrophobic tension of the first installment. If you’re into morally gray characters and political intrigue with a side of supernatural horror, this trilogy is like a gourmet meal. I still get chills thinking about certain scenes from 'The Invisible Ring'—the way Bishop plays with light and shadow is downright cinematic.
I've been telling friends about this one for years whenever chess comes up—'The Queen's Gambit' was first published in 1983, written by Walter Tevis. I bumped into the book after watching the adaptation and got curious about the source; the novel is a tight, character-driven story about Beth Harmon, a chess prodigy wrestling with genius, addiction, and the strange solitude of competition. The 1983 publication date surprised me at first because the book feels so modern in its emotional beats, yet it sits squarely in Tevis's later career.
Reading the book after seeing the show felt like peeling back layers: Tevis's prose is lean but rich, and knowing it came out in 1983 gives you context for the social attitudes and cold-war chess scene that quietly colors the narrative. If you like following how adaptations reshape source material, it's fun to compare the novel's internal monologue with the visual choices of the series.
If you haven't read it, treat it like a compact novel that punches above its weight—it's short but stays with you. And if you love chess history, you'll appreciate the period detail; it helped spark renewed interest in the game for a lot of people, myself included.
The Black Queen' is this darkly enchanting novel that hooked me from the first chapter. It follows a young woman named Nira, who inherits a cursed throne in a kingdom where shadows whisper secrets. The story blends political intrigue with supernatural elements—imagine 'Game of Thrones' meets 'The Cruel Prince', but with a unique twist. Nira’s struggle isn’t just about power; it’s about unraveling the mystery of her predecessor’s death while resisting the throne’s malevolent influence. The pacing is relentless, and the side characters—like a snarky royal spy and a exiled witch—add layers of tension. What really got me was how the author makes the kingdom itself feel like a character, with its eerie forests and shifting palace walls.
I couldn’t put it down because of the moral grayness. Nira isn’t a typical heroine; she makes brutal choices, and the line between villain and victim blurs beautifully. The climax left me gasping—no spoilers, but let’s just say the queen’s crown isn’t the only thing that’s 'black'. If you love fantasy with teeth, this one’s a must-read.