Friday, July 31, 2015

Heir of Fire by Sarah J. Maas-5 Stars (A Bazillion-Kajillian Stars)



(reposting from Goodreads)
Do you like screaming at books when bad things happen to characters you like and then crying for a long time afterward? Because I obviously do. All of my favourite books seem to have instances of horrible things happening to characters I love that leaves me screaming out loud and crying (I'm sure my neighbours think I'm a crazy person but oh well. They'll get a whole new taste of things when The Walking Dead comes back on, I'm sure). I just seem to really love books that are beautifully written and with amazing characters who completely break my heart into itty bitty pieces and then leave me in a puddle of feels all over the floor. Seriously I spent most of the last half of this book crying...and I absolutely loved it. Maas has managed to create fictional people that I care deeply about and want to pull close and hug for a while to try to make the crappy things they're going through a little better. She hurts them and beats them down and then helps them put themselves back together (at least most of the time...seriously, this series has a good deal of heartbreak in it but it's totally worth it for the amazing story). And while it is horrifyingly sad that I now have to wait another year until book 4 is out...I will endure because I have faith that Maas will bring more awesomeness and probably blow me out of the water again. Also...I can just reread the first three books again to tide myself over until then (or, you know, if I feel like crying buckets of tears again. Seriously, I have a feeling that Heir of Fire will be like Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 in that I'll think I can read it again and be fine and not cry nearly as much...and then I'll find myself in a puddle of my own tears while yelling at myself for how this was not a good idea). :)

And even though Goodreads caps me at 5 stars...this books deserves all the stars, a million trillion bazillion stars...for Celaena to rattle to her heart's content.

Crown of Midnight by Sarah J. Maas-5 Stars



(reposting from Goodreads)
Oh. My. Good Gravy.
Poor Chaol. I feel so bad for that big bombshell happening just when he can't do anything about it. I saw that reveal coming, but then I was kinda supposed to since I had access to Celaena's thoughts while he didn't. But dang...
I don't even quite know what to say about this book. It made me laugh, it made me cry, it made me gasp, it made me get all kinds of sweet butterflies-in-stomach feelings before ripping them away (again, poor Chaol. I feel bad for you, son), it made me angry that I now have to wait for the next book to come out (NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!). Celaena was even better than the first book (clever, clever girl), Chaol made me swoon all the time, and Dorian's growth as a character was interesting as well (poor kid. He's going to have a hard time of it in the next book, I can tell). My only complaint is that some of the foreshadowing was a teensy bit heavy-handed, but that didn't detract from my enjoyment of the story at all. And I thought this book did a much better job switching from POVs than the last book, much clearer this time.
And that's all I can really say at the moment because my feelings are just too crazy and jumbled to really process the end of this book and the wait for the next one. Why? Why do I have to wait? WHYYYYYY?!

Throne of Glass by Sarah J. Maas-4 Stars



(reposting from Goodreads because for some reason my reviews weren't getting published when I thought they were supposed to be. hopefully they'll work from now on)

Holy schnikes, this was a good read. The only thing that keeps me from 5 starring this was the slightly stilted writing style at times (which either faded away the further in I got or I just got some enveloped in the story that I stopped noticing it) and the at time weird juxtaposition of words and concepts from our reality showing up in Erilea (the waltz was the biggest one that threw me. It was just kinda weird to see that used in a medieval-set fantasy world, a little out of place. Maybe that's just me, but I would have liked to see an invented term made up for a type of dance that was described as similar to the waltz. A little nit-picky I know but it just threw me out of the story for a moment). Otherwise this was a pretty phenomenal read. I really liked the characters (except, of course, the bad guys but you're not supposed to like them most of the time). Celaena was awesome and well-rounded and entertaining as hell (loved her anger and impulse-control issues mostly because it made her seem like a real person and made her relatable--at least to me, but I have my own anger management issues at times). Dorian was funny and charming and kind and sweet and I could totally see why Celaena liked him so much...but I'm Team Chaol all the way (even though I could only pronounce his name correctly about 76% of the time). Even though I got a little tired of the all the descriptions of his eyes (they're golden brown, or chestnut, or warm brown, or...you get the picture), I liked his gruffness and aloofness and how much he liked Celaena despite his better judgment (and him during that final duel...I just wanted to kiss him). I wish I already had the second book so I could start reading it immediately but alas, it's checked out by someone else and I have to wait my turn.

I hate waiting.

Guess I'll tide myself over with reading the novellas in the meantime. :)