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gwentolios

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I picked this up because a friend said David Tennant narrated the audiobook, and he's awesome!

The book was good too, of course. Half of the MG books I pick up I can tell feel young to me, but I didn't have that impression with this. It was short, but cute and funny. The book equivalent of a half hour feel-good TV show that is just the thing you need to pick up your mood. This was funnier than I expected it to be, full of situations you can't quite believe are real and so ridiculous you have to love them. At the same time, this book isn't all giggles and rolled eyes - the consequences were more dramatic than I expected.

And why yes, I requested the next two from my library.

Oooo, I know why people rave about this so much now.

This is a chunkier book than I expected, full of scenes and situations that surprised me for a variety of reasons. Maturity. The graphic nature of it. How deep and dark betrayals were.

That might be why I liked it though - Hale doesn't shy away from the shocking things that shape a character. And Ani's slow growth through the novel was perfect - from her dismissal by her mother all the way up to winning the support of local workers and forcing kings to listen to her.

She's not a physical heroine. She doesn't brandish a sword. Doesn't think up clever plans. Instead, Ani wins by learning to listen to the world around her. To herself. To the boys and girls she works with. To animals and nature.

Listening is quite a power here and it's paired up with the power of worlds so nicely. But what ultimately saves Ani is others' willingness to hear her out. Finding strength in absorbing the world and exposing the truth is exactly the tale I needed to kick-start the new year.


Living in Chicago, I loved learning about the history of the city. And even just the history of the times. Larson covers so much ground about the quality of life, the economic situation of the Long Depression, and the passive-aggressive nature of Chicago vs New York and the US, through Chicago, vs Europe.

Watching the White City being built up from swampy land to a city of the future whose legacy still lives is incredible.

Of course, reading about Holmes and his elaborate steps to control, possessive, and then murder women was also fascinating. Mainly how he continued to get away with it for so long. What he did would be hard to do today, and reading about his set up and elaborate plans was morbidly interesting.

I must be, like, very desensitized to angst (thank you fanfic) because I did not get that 'I just got hit by a bus/kill me now' feeling a lot of people got. But I still found this phenomenal.

What really got me was all the complex relationships between, well, everyone. It was like, every thirty pages things would shift and not in the way you expected. Games over games over games. The ties between people, what they all struggle for, the responsibilities, the rules. Awesome. All awesome.

And Jude was perfect. How fear was such a part of herself she couldn't show it anymore. How she would never truly belong in either world. How family comes first, even if it's messed up. And how while her immediate goals shift, she still always strives for power. Power is safety until you start to amass too much of it.

Of course, I loved the rest of them too. Vivi's rebellions against her dad and guilt at bringing her sisters into faerie. Taryn's own plan of attack to be safe. Madoc's love for his family, but the inability to express it outside of this faerie limitations. Locke's games to ruin all around him. Cardan's vaguely moral line.

Everything just works together *so well*.


Yeah, I loved this.

Killer sirens, pirate princess, magic powers, plotting princesses. There's a lot going on here and all of it is AMAZING.

What really blew me away was Lira (the siren princess). How being forced into a human shaped started to change her, opening her up to humanity. Her character arc was amazing to read, and I loved how Elian, the prince, would describe her. Sharp and capable, dangerous and cunning. The relationship between the two of them is beautiful, the classic enemies-to-lovers tale and that has always been my jam.

Plus, the touch of Greek in here made me so happy. I already have a queue lined up of who gets my copy next >.