Tag Archives: literature

The Girl of Fire and Thorns by Rae Carson

TGoFaT
First off, this book has such a lovely cover! If I had to rate the book for just its cover, I’d give it a four out of five.

Fun fact: I like high fantasy stories. Gaiman and Tolkien are my favorite authors when it comes to high fantasy. I haven’t read much high fantasy in the YA genre though. This book has just the right elements of a standard “hero-or for this instance heroine-journeys-and-discovers-her-strength-and-purpose-in-the-world”.

So we have, Lucero-Elisa (I like her name) or Elisa. She was born a princess and on her name day was given a gift and a responsibility. She is the bearer of the Godstone, supposedly bestowed by God to a chosen one every hundred years. On her sixteenth birthday, she was married off to a King from a neighboring land plagued by threats of war. It is in this foreign land of deserts and oasis that she will fulfill the prophecy of doing an act of service to God and the people of the land.

This book had religious tones which makes it really unique from most books that I’ve read. Reading about the characters in the book and of their faith reminded me a lot of the saying:

“The road to hell is paved with good intentions”.

Religious faith and the will of God were emphasized which eventually reflected how humans, no matter how pure or jaded they may be, are all part of God’s plan.

Even if the story is in the fantasy genre, the characters are very real. Take Elisa for example, she is the first heroine that I’ve read in a long while who is described as fat and “sausage-looking”. King Alejandro de Vega, while his name sounds oh-so-majestic, was an indecisive leader and was blind to the betrayals around him.

I would like to give Father Alentin, priest and rebel, a shout out for his wonderful quips when speaking of the King. My personal favorite would have to be

“…but His Majesty, may multitudinous sons spring from his loins,…”

As for the love angle in this book, well let’s just say that it was a romance-that-never-was. I wouldn’t want to spoil you of anything. *grin

This book could have been super great if:
☆ some sort of backstory was given about the Inviernos, the enemy
☆ a map of the land –it’s a new world so a little help is necessary
☆ more sorcery stuff
☆ MORE HECTOR –I liked this character a lot

The second book in the trilogy is set to be released by September this year. While waiting for it, you can ogle at the lovely UK version of the book cover.

RATING:

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Darkness Becomes Her by Kelly Keaton

Summary over @ Goodreads

Story dragged during the early parts. I’d like to give myself a pat on the shoulder for pushing myself to read further. When the plot picked up somewhere along chapters 9 or 10-ish, I thought this book had its own charm.
Ari’s (our protagonist) character development was a slow to build. I wondered sometimes if the girl had schizophrenia.One second, she was this brave chick knocking strangely clad men’s head down then she suddenly freaks and breaks down for something totally unexpected. She did grew on me eventually.

Weak point? Definitely the love angle between Ari and Sebastian. Since this is going to be a series, it might have been better if the love angle was steadily built instead of dumping it on our heads.
Will I read on to the next installment? Sure, Goodreads did give the 2nd book a better rating than this one.  SPOILER ALERT! Also, the idea that the Greek goddess of wisdom is an evil bitch is quite foreign. (fun fact: Athena is one of the godesses that i actually like. So speaks the ravenclaw in me. LOL)…Yet another reason why I’m looking forward to the next book.

RATING: stars stars stars stars

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