Showing posts with label sarah j maas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sarah j maas. Show all posts

Wednesday, 23 September 2015

Young Adult Book Review – Queen of Shadows (Throne of Glass #4) – Sarah J Maas

Young Adult Book Review – Queen of Shadows (Throne of Glass #4) – Sarah J Maas

Recommended for literally everyone ever, though thinking about it I suppose it’s 13+ really













I waited long and hard for this. A whole year pretty much of anticipation and sweating and getting distracted by the amazingness that was A Court of Thorns and Roses and then some more sweating and publishing some more music to showcase my love of the Throne of Glass world (www.youtube.com/bertass if you’ve not heard any of it) and having another son somewhere in the mix too, before finally being rewarded for my diligence and devotion with the publication at long last of Queen of Shadows, book four in the Throne of Glass series.

I needed – like, needed - a fantastic and memorable story to go along with the various bouts of sweaty anticipation etc. outlined above, lest my world come crashing down around me as I tasted the horror of a Throne of Glass book not living up to my expectations.

Was it salty tears of joy that I tasted upon finishing, or salty tears of agony and disappointment?

Well, duh. Joy, obviously. It’s freaking brilliant.

The 650-page beast that is Queen of Shadows is full of action, revelation, twists and emotion with nary a page wasted, as Sarah J Maas once more takes us into the rich fantasy world that she has created and leaves us breathless in anticipation for what is to come in the last couple of books of the series.

The feels, man. The feels.

I’m not going to spoil those feels for you, as you need to feel them fully un-spoilered for yourself, but my whole heart took a huge pounding during this book, more so than with any other despite the agonising deaths that had come before. Everything is up in the air and no-one is safe at any point, barring Aelin/Celaena of course, and so you really don’t know who is going to make it and who isn’t.
Aelin truly becomes the Queen she has always been over the course of the book, and remains one of my favourite-written characters from any series I have ever read. Her relationship with all the other characters develops considerably by the time the story is finished, from those we’ve seen her interact with before, to those we know she has done but we haven’t personally seen yet. She gets her revenge on some, and she befriends others that she wouldn’t dream of befriending before. She establishes the main players in her court, and she rains hell on those that would oppose her. I’d follow her into the fires of hell, though I’d have to wait in line behind those already protecting her.

Elsewhere, we have the alpha-male-off that we’d always wanted between Rowan and Aedion, both devoted to her in different ways, but equally committed to protecting her life. Chaol is perhaps the most changed of all of them, fully on the side of the rebels opposing the king now, but bearing the scars of watching so many good people die and seeing his friend and prince, Dorian, consumed by the demon prince that now vies for control of his body. It’s not a happy reunion between Chaol and Aelin, to put it mildly, and the tension that builds between them as they disagree on the best way to help Dorian is heartbreaking, as is the state that we saw the prince in.

There are several new characters, notably the highly-skilled guard and lover of Chaol, Nesryn Faliq, and Lysandra, former rival of Aelin from her time in the Assassin’s Guild. Both are strong, brave, and fun to spend time with, and more great examples of strong heroines in the fantasy genre that Maas’ excels at writing. You don’t need to look far to find strong female characters for girls and boys to look up to in the Throne of Glass world.

We also get to meet Arobynn, King of the Assassins, and Aelin’s former master. He’s as cunning and deceitful as we’ve been led to believe, and its great watching the battle between him and Aelin play out as she seeks her revenge on him. And it’s not just Aelin who wants revenge…

The witch Manon and her Thirteen are also still there, growing increasingly frustrated under the command of humans, and as deadly and dangerous as ever, but they grow in a way that’s unexpected and promising to make their role in the final two books even more exciting and unpredictable.

I’ve always thought that the dialogue between characters is one of Maas’ biggest strengths, but she’s also fantastic at misdirection and twists, particularly so in this book. Aelin has plenty of tricks up her sleeve to fool both her enemies, her friends and us as readers, and there’s one particular twist that will throw everything you know about the Throne of Glass series on its head. If, as the characters themselves point out, it’s not just another lie…

So, are there any criticisms? Well, the length doesn’t bother me one bit. The more the better to be honest. I read one review that complained about the text going on too often about how wonderful Aelin is, and though I agree that the characters and narration do praise her a lot, I spent the entire book thinking about how wonderful Aelin is so it kind of just mirrored exactly what I was thinking at the time and didn’t bother me in the slightest. I can’t fault the dialogue, the world-building, the twists and turns, the interaction between the main characters…I just enjoy it all so much I can’t find faults to pick.

I have to wait another year for Book 5, and to be honest I almost feel like I need it this time to recover from everything that’s happened. A Court of Thorns and Roses 2 will come along and keep me going in the meantime, I’ve no doubt, but until then I’ll have to make do with analysing everything that’s happened and creating more music to go along with it. Queen of Shadows is a 650-page epic that will enthral you as much as anything else she’s written before, and it’s another brilliant addition to the series.

My favourite modern fantasy series just got even better.


5/5

Monday, 9 March 2015

Young Adult Book Review - Heir of Fire (Throne of Glass Book 3) - Sarah J Maas

Young Adult Book Review - Heir of Fire (Throne of Glass Book 3) - Sarah J Maas

Recommended for literally everyone. EVERYONE.




I received an ARC of Heir of Fire from Bloomsbury, in exchange for an honest review. I've literally just realised that I never posted that review (though I was convinced I had), so massive apologies to them, as I was so grateful to get to read it early. Letting the blogging world down there...

It's literally impossible to convey just how much I loved Heir of Fire. There hasn't been an author that has excited me as much as Sarah J Maas does in the past decade (or perhaps longer), and this was without doubt my most anticipated book of 2014. Was it also my favourite book of 2014? Hell yeah it was, and for me it's the best of the series so far as well.

It's also the longest, which can sometimes become a problem if you feel that the author is throwing everything they possibly can at you story-wise, rather than picking the most interesting and important parts (hello, ASOIAF...), but here it's needed to really tell Celaena's story of learning to harness her magic with the wonderfully uptight and mysterious Rowan in Wendlyn and beyond, whilst maintaining the danger that both Chaol and Dorian are in back home in Adarlan. The introduction of witch Manon is a welcome third storyline, as is the further exploration of the lore of the Wyrdkeys and Wyrdgates.

the main strength of the Throne of Glass series remains it's characters. I've never known anyone write dialogue that attracts me as well as Maas; it's snappy, realistic, and it's exactly how I wish I could write. Seriously, NO-ONE inspires me to write like she does. I've even written music for the series based on the feelings it stirs (currently at two tracks recorded but with plenty more written...www.youtube.com/bertass). I'm so completely engaged and wrapped up in this world that she's created that it really is hell waiting for the fourth book to come out. I need to know whether the feelings between Celaena and Rowan and just incredibly strong friendship or something more to come; I need to know whether Celaena and Chaol can ever work it out; I need to know just how Celaena is going to save the world and end the reign of the King of Adarlan; I need to know when it's all going to explode in one magic-fuelled battle orgy to rival anything seen in LOTR.

I also need to know when they're going to give the go ahead to the gritty television series starring Taylor Momsen as Celaena, because seriously, that's blatantly her on the cover.

New characters like Rowan and Aedion (pure bad-ass - Chris Jericho?) instantly belong alongside the established ones, building up this pantheon of legendary figures into one of my favourite literary casts of all time, with Celaena still at the head of it all. She would have united the Seven Kingdoms of Westeros by now, AND kept peace in Esos; she would have thrown the One Ring into Mount Doom far before Sam had to carry Frodo to the top; she'd just have given Voldemort the evil stare and he'd have crumbled, Elder Wand or none. To me, she's emblazoned in fantasy heroine law at the very top of everyone else, and I'm desperate to discover the next step along her fateful journey.

There isn't a single author that I recommend to the users of my library as much as Sarah J Maas; there's a whole new army of fans that I've managed to recruit because it's impossible for me NOT to gush about her work. I can feel my face light up and the passion start to brew as I find someone suitable to recommend to, and I'll continue to do it till I'm no longer breathing. If I make it to her latest book tour, I'm going to present her with a copy of all the music that she's inspired me to write for the series, and make sure she knows that without her, I wouldn't have picked up the fantasy trilogy that I started writing seven years ago, and be well on the way to completing it.

The Throne of Glass series is a complete must for any fantasy fans.

5/5

Thanks to Bloomsbury for letting me have an ARC of this, and apologies for the massive delay in putting up this review, which I thought I'd already done. I'm presuming that's why I was denied an ARC of A Court of Thorns and Roses, so now that I've apologise can I please have one?! Pretty please?!