Abiassa's Fire Books in Order
Part ofRonie Kendig Books in OrderFind the Abiassa's Fire series by Ronie Kendig in order, with book summaries, world background, and an easy place to start.
Last updated: June 10, 2026
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Publication Order
4 books
Embers
by Ronie Kendig
2015
Royal siblings Haegan and Kaelyria Celahar make a forbidden choice that shifts power, wounds, and destiny between them. As war looms, Haegan must flee and find a way to save both his sister and the kingdom.
Accelerant
by Ronie Kendig
2016
The Nine Kingdoms bleed while Haegan wrestles with the terrible power and calling taking shape inside him. To save his people, he must return home and choose between the needs of his kingdom and the fate of the wider world.
Fierian
by Ronie Kendig
2018
With the Nine Kingdoms collapsing, Haegan must finally face what he has become and what the world expects of him. The trilogy's finale turns prophecy, power, and sacrifice into one last desperate stand.
Abiassa's Fire
by Ronie Kendig
2019
This trilogy gathers the full saga of Haegan and Kaelyria Celahar, royal siblings bound to powerful Flames and a kingdom on the brink. It is epic fantasy built on family loyalty, sacrifice, and a long war for the Nine Kingdoms.
Series background & context
Abiassa's Fire is Ronie Kendig in epic fantasy mode, but the heart of the series is still very human. At the center are royal siblings Haegan and Kaelyria Celahar, heirs of the Nine Kingdoms, bound together by family, duty, and a dangerous connection to living fire. The series opens with Embers, and from the start it is clear this is not a tidy court fantasy. It is a story built on sacrifice, exile, war, and the painful cost of loving someone enough to ruin your life for them.
The turning point comes early. To save the kingdom, power is transferred between brother and sister in a forbidden act that heals Haegan while leaving Kaelyria to bear the injury that once marked him. That choice does not solve their problems. It detonates them. Haegan is driven from home, the royal family fractures, and the larger threat of Poired Dyrth grows harder to ignore.
From there, Accelerant and Fierian widen the war and deepen the questions around destiny. Haegan is not just trying to survive or reclaim a throne. He is trying to understand what kind of force he is becoming, what the prophecy around the Fierian really means, and whether saving the world will require him to become something frightening. Kendig keeps the emotional thread tight even as the scale expands.
The fire here is not just flashy magic.
It is tied to identity, calling, fear, and control. That gives the books a strong internal pull. The battles, kingdoms, and fantasy creatures matter, but so do the smaller things, resentment between siblings, loyalty to home, the ache of separation, and the dread that the answer to evil may look too much like it.
If you want a fantasy series that feels big without becoming cold, this is a strong place to start. Read Embers, then Accelerant, then Fierian, or pick up the Abiassa's Fire collection if you want the full arc together. These books work especially well for readers who like wounded heroes, royal stakes, and magic that always seems to ask for more than anyone wants to pay.
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