

Will it be as amazing for you after such a fabulous couple of books? Time will tell. But I'm the sort of person where one truly intriguing aspect (*cough* troubled anti-hero *cough*) can rope me in for the long haul, so I've stuck around, and it became amazing. Some of them feel redundant and/or slow at times. But the changing POVs CAN be a chore, and I'll be the first to admit it. I grew to appreciate Morgan Rhodes's style. Given how much you LOVED the aforementioned two, I'm hesitant to suggest this, even though it's two days later and I've just finished book 3 and effectively marathoned all the books currently out, and thoroughly enjoyed it all. The Honest Bookclub 21 October 2015 at 10:35Ĭait, your reviews have given me LIFE lately (Blood Red Road! The Demon King!), given my fantasy kick and given my anticipation of many a hangover in that department (I've yet to read Six of Crows, and this Falling Kingdoms binge has been no walk in the park, either). The line of morality throughout and looks damn good doing it.

The Master of Revenge, oscillates between I LOVE CLEO, THAT GODDESS OF LOVELYĪnd I HATE CLEO, THAT POISONOUS VIPER.

The ones she does make are at the very least rational and reasonable. ByĬontrast, Lucia hardly makes a decision at all, rendering her a bit bland, but Infuriatingly incapable of making a good decision to save her life. Cleo is at the same time beloved by everyone (literally -Įvery single male who comes into contact with her falls in love) and It was Cleo who seemed to propel the story forward, and it was Cleo who Many other highly relevant characters, this first book was largely The Cleo

And despite four distinct points of view and many, Their vastly different lives, Cleo, Jonas, Magnus and Lucia find their livesĬonverging and intermingling at the onset of a war between the kingdoms andĬivil unrest throughout. Despite the hundreds of miles separating them and despite
