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ambeesbookishpages 's review for:
Godsgrave
by Jay Kristoff
The full review + more can be found at The Book Bratz
THAT ENDING. WHAT. HOW. JAY HOW CAN YOU!? *SOBS*
I thought my heart was finally going to start mending after the events of Nevernight, but hell that didn't happen. If anything I probably spent a decent chunk of this book crying, angry or angry crying because WHY? If you read my review for Nevernight (check it out here!) you know that I originally DNFed the first book four times but finally pushed through and now I am obsessed with Mia Corvere. So here I am, messing up my sleep schedule because I stayed up until 4a.m. to finish this book and now I will be a sobbing mess until Darkdawn is here
Mia Corvere is a bad ass and that is all there is too it. This girl, who is 16 years old (Possibly 17 now.) has put herself through hell after hell to avenge her family and loved ones. If we want to discuss an epic heroine? Mia Corvere. Yes, she is 16 and no, this isn't a YA novel so I am not grouping her in with YA characters. Mia stands on her own two feet in her own category. If you thought there was a lot of blood, gore, stabbing and profanity in Nevernight? Just wait until you open Godsgrave, there is so much more and I've grown to love it. We continue to watch Mia make hard decision after harder decision in this installment of the series. In the first few chapters I wasn't all too sure what was happening, but after a few chapters everything falls into place and it is told in a similar style that Nevernight was.
Mia has one of my favorite character arcs that I have ever read. Seeing where she has come from page one in the first book of the series, to where she is now at the end of book two. It's mind blowing. I don't want to give too much away because there is so much that is going to happen, but I left Nevernight with a general understanding of everything that was going on to be told in Godsgrave "hahaha sike."
Again, this is an adult novel and there are graphic sex scenes and quite vulgar language. I been trying to put this part of my review into words for a while (I been writing this review for about an hour now
THAT ENDING. WHAT. HOW. JAY HOW CAN YOU!? *SOBS*
I thought my heart was finally going to start mending after the events of Nevernight, but hell that didn't happen. If anything I probably spent a decent chunk of this book crying, angry or angry crying because WHY? If you read my review for Nevernight (check it out here!) you know that I originally DNFed the first book four times but finally pushed through and now I am obsessed with Mia Corvere. So here I am, messing up my sleep schedule because I stayed up until 4a.m. to finish this book and now I will be a sobbing mess until Darkdawn is here
Mia Corvere is a bad ass and that is all there is too it. This girl, who is 16 years old (Possibly 17 now.) has put herself through hell after hell to avenge her family and loved ones. If we want to discuss an epic heroine? Mia Corvere. Yes, she is 16 and no, this isn't a YA novel so I am not grouping her in with YA characters. Mia stands on her own two feet in her own category. If you thought there was a lot of blood, gore, stabbing and profanity in Nevernight? Just wait until you open Godsgrave, there is so much more and I've grown to love it. We continue to watch Mia make hard decision after harder decision in this installment of the series. In the first few chapters I wasn't all too sure what was happening, but after a few chapters everything falls into place and it is told in a similar style that Nevernight was.
Mia has one of my favorite character arcs that I have ever read. Seeing where she has come from page one in the first book of the series, to where she is now at the end of book two. It's mind blowing. I don't want to give too much away because there is so much that is going to happen, but I left Nevernight with a general understanding of everything that was going on to be told in Godsgrave "hahaha sike."
Again, this is an adult novel and there are graphic sex scenes and quite vulgar language. I been trying to put this part of my review into words for a while (I been writing this review for about an hour now