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February 13, 2018 , Tue | Book Couples Countdown | 0 or add you thoughts!

Welcome to Day 7 of Book Couples Countdown!! I chose Nesta and Cassian for this illustrious final spot, because I can never stop obsessing over them. Also, since I love basically every single romance Sarah J. Maas has created, it felt right for one of hers to be my ultimate pick!

Art by Monolime.

Okay, so I’m just going to start by saying that I can never get enough of these two. I read fan fiction, I’ve got fan art framed on my wall, and I am unreasonably excited for their story to continue in the next part of this series. Is it May yet?!

They hit every note for me when it comes to my personal preferences for a great romance. I love a good slow burn. I love witty banter. I love tough, sometimes unkind, exteriors masking a depth of emotion. I love badass characters who are also reserved and have a strength of presence. I think you can see how I’m a total Nessian fangirl!

Art by Salome Totladze.

That said, one thing I’m excited for is their softening of each other. I feel like this might have to happen a little bit, because they both carry some emotional baggage and deal with it through behaviors that can be damaging at times, especially in regard to how they relate to each other. Cassian leans on physical dominance and humor, while Nesta is oh so cold and distant. I think that as they try (hopefully) to define their relationship, they’ll help each other to grow past these crutches. read more

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November 19, 2017 , Sun | Reviews | 0 or add you thoughts!

“Her manic phases were a trip, though. For my eighth birthday she took me to a department store, handed me a cart, and told me to fill it with whatever I wanted. When I was nine and into reptiles she surprised me by setting up a terrarium in the living room with a bearded dragon. We called it Stan after Stan Lee, and I still have it. Those things live forever.”

Themes:

  • Friendship
  • Thinking you know someone versus truly seeing them
  • The importance of reserving judgements and always striving to empathize

Before starting this, I had heard it described as The Breakfast Club meets Pretty Little Liars—intriguing, right? I’m not huge into thriller books, but Halloween was approaching, and I kept hearing about this, so I started it. And I’m so glad I did! I expected One of Us is Lying to be entertaining. I didn’t expect it to be something I can see myself rereading.

Let’s start with the fact that while the characters are, at their basest level, somewhat tropy, they all have such interesting growth. By the end of the novel, I really felt McManus had demonstrated each character’s individual complexity quite well. I feel like I know these people, and I want to know them more. Addy’s story arc was particularly awesome, in my opinion. She went from a character I couldn’t stand to one I would read a whole book about. Seriously. I also loved Cooper, who is gay and outed in the process of the investigation into what happened to Simon. I can’t personally speak to the representation, but I could imagine how his story line would be relatable to an underrepresented group of people, which is so important. He’s a star baseball player, with a father who literally calls people fags. It’s in this environment that we first see Cooper, in love with a man named Kris, but dating a girl named Keely. When Cooper was forcibly outed, it was painful. It was awful. But, it did help someone like myself, who hasn’t had that particular experience, empathize with people who do go through that. I felt better able to relate to how assaulted someone in that situation would feel. So I thought that was a great element of his story! Plus, I loved him and Kris! read more

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September 29, 2017 , Fri | Reviews | 0 or add you thoughts!

“I hated her; I wanted her to burn, the way so many of the corrupted had burned, because she’d put her hold on them. But wanting cruelty felt like another wrong answer in an endless chain. The people of the tower had walled her up, then she’d struck them all down. She’d raised up the wood to devour us; now we’d give her to the fire-heart, and choke all this shining clear water with ash. None of that seemed right.”

Themes:

  • Cyclical violence
  • Female empowerment
  • Humanity’s destruction of the natural world

Oh my goodness, how I adore this book. It is already on my favorites list!

Uprooted gives the reader that old-timey fantasy feel. It reminded me almost immediately of The Charwoman’s Shadow by Lord Dunsany, but it also makes me think of Till We Have Faces by C.S. Lewis. So if you enjoy elements of those, this is a book you should give a try. If you have never read those or don’t enjoy them, you should still give this one a try.

I love the way magic works in this story and how Novik allows the reader to slowly discover it. Sarkan and Agnieszka’s magic operates so differently, yet creates beautiful results when worked together. It is a fascinating element of the story and inspires growth in Sarkan and Agnieszka’s relationship. read more

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