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104 reviews by:
tired_cicada
Loved it.
Low key, not a lot happens, but at the same time SO MUCH HAPPENS!!
For being titled "The Well of Ascension" we don't actually spend a lot of time worrying about that.
Also, the timeline of this series doesn't make a bit of sense and it confusing and inconsistent.
Continuing... This book kinda wrapped up nicely. Like, it's open ended but in a resolved kinda way so WHAT is the third book going to be about? This was planned as a duology as far as I knew, so I worry this third book is going to fall very flat.
Luckily, I have the FairyLoot editions so even if it is at least it will look STUNNING on my shelves.
Moderate: Child death, Death, Death of parent, Fire/Fire injury
(Check trigger warning through!)
I am I sucker for nonlinear story telling, I live pick out the lies and the half truths! I am glad I didn't know anything about this though, cause if I'd know this book was told in second person I probably wouldn't have picked it up, but...
This it was just too good!
I would recommend this book to my friends... But maybe not my mom. If you know you know.
I need book two right now!
Graphic: Body horror, Child abuse, Child death, Death, Slavery, Torture, Forced institutionalization, Blood, Kidnapping, Grief, Gaslighting, Classism
Moderate: Domestic abuse, Misogyny, Rape, Sexual content, Torture, Kidnapping, Death of parent, Pregnancy, Fire/Fire injury, War
Minor: Pedophilia, Physical abuse, Sexual assault, Vomit, Cannibalism, Toxic friendship, Sexual harassment
Don't get me wrong, I liked it, I will be picking up the next book. I've been told the author's writing improves with each book, so I'm willing to give her that chance.
Gothic horror at its finest, with twists and turns that had me at the edge of my seat!
Graphic: Body horror, Confinement, Murder, Toxic friendship, Abandonment
Moderate: Death, Emotional abuse, Death of parent, Gaslighting, Alcohol, Classism
Minor: Pedophilia, Sexual assault, Suicide attempt, Death of parent
The plot twists were really easy to figure out. I guessed the killer before the halfway point and was just BEGGING the MC to start seeing all the very obvious clues. This issues that hampen our MC (particularly the social issues) felt really contrived and repetitive. Its the same thing again and again, just eat the stupid cookie already! Its literally not that big of a deal. Also, the MC being naive about the world as a conduit for shoving world building down the readers throat is really just lazy.
The manifestation of Death was fun! I really did enjoy that! And the way the villain meets their just desserts was satisfying for the most part.
It was a fun read, but the great read I was hoping it would be. I'm still going to check out Foxglove and give it a chance.
The love triangle was so forced it was actually painful, particularly when one of the "love interests" would have an INFINITY more palatable more interesting character as an over protective brother figure. also, you read that man's discription and tell me that isn't a raging homosexual!! You took a perfectly good green haired, colored pants, vest wearing gay man and turned him into a dude bro?!?!?! Unforgivable!!!
Also, the MC is 17 and both of the love interests are in their mid 30's BUT THEY LOOK 18 BECASUE OF MAGIC SO ITS OKAY ACTUALLY 🤮
Finally every single plot twist was so obvious that I was actually offended they were drug out so long. I maybe could have forgiven that if the payoff for even one of the reveals was satisfying but literally not a single one of them was.
No going forward there are going to be several spoilers throughout this review! The bigger ones all kind of separate off, but I am going to be discussing plot points, and character decisions. So be aware!
New povs
One thing that I was obsessed with in one dark window was the incredibly brave thing that Gillig does and essentially destroying her main character. At the end of book one the POV character essentially does not exist anymore. That is an incredibly brave thing to do, both narratively and as a debut author. So often it's characters that we connect with so to have the character who's story we've been following the entire time be gone is a risky business. That said it's handled so well. The one thing I can see some people having issue with is that we are going from a first person point of view with a singular narrator, into a book that has third person multiple povs. It didn't bother me but I know that can be something that other people find issue with.
That said I was obsessed with each of the new povs we got. Each character feels distinct from the others. There isn't a flat narrator voice simply telling you what different characters are doing it actually felt like each character had their own voice to tell their own story. Now let's get into it... We get three povs in this novel Rayen who is struggling with the fact that he is stuck traveling with the monster that is taken over the body of the woman he's fallen in love with, then we have Elm who is dealing with the ramifications of his father's brutal court, and his brother's blatant abuse without the protection of his cousin that he's come to rely on. Finally we have
One thing that you should know about me is that my favorite character in any piece of media is always going to be the saddest boy available. There is something about a fictional man who is sad and expressing emotions that hit just right. So Elm was next level. We have childhood trauma, we have feelings of inadequacy, we have mutual pining, we have abandonment issues! I was being fed here!
With elms story we are largely watching a cinderella-like story play out juxtaposed against Ravyn's race against Time to save the lives of those he loves... And lo -key I was more stressed out about the Cinderella story. The way Elm and Ione interact was so entertaining. The way they clash heads, and the way they work together toward a common goal was rippled with tension. Now I had the vaugest inklings in book one, and I was fully prepared for this to be a crack ship I was RIGHT! Don't you ever doubt my ability to sniff out a romance! Where as last time we got the delightful fake dating trope this time we are having a delightful time with this forbidden Love. I was having a stellar time thank you very much!
Then of course we have, as mentioned before, Ravyn embarking on a race against Time to find the twin alder card! He is balancing the line between staying just well enough inside of the king's good graces, well also committing blatant treason. All the while having to look into the eyes that no longer belong to the woman he loves knowing that anything goes wrong he will never get her back. The banter between all of the characters in this POV is delightful. We have the ivy twins back and I love them in the first book. They were so light-hearted and they gave an air of humor to everything. So I was delighted to have them back. And then I love how Gillig writes siblings. The interactions between Ravyn and his sister feel like interactions that actual siblings would have. It is so hard to write sibling Dynamics in a way that don't come off entirely cringy, so I enjoyed feeling like this was real. Like they actually had a relationship. And to watch the give and the take, to see the way that their sibling dynamic plays out to both their strengths and their detriments was done incredibly well. And blends so well against the backdrop of the historical information that is being sprinkled throughout. Showing that if history doesn't repeat it sure does rhyme.
Magic system
Now you cannot talk about this series without talking about the magic system. It is a stunningly done incredibly unique system, where we're dealing with two types of hard magics. We have the fever, which grants individual powers to different people seemingly involuntarily. And the more we learn about the fevers brought on by the mist, and how the spirit of the wood fit into the larger society the more we're starting to understand how the Rowans came to power and why.
Then of course there are the cards themselves. The whole point of the story is to get the final card out of the deck so that people can be cured of the sickness that comes from the mist. So that their magic will no longer be killing them. The way the different cards are handled is so beautiful. Taking simple cards that can largely be overlooked and showing that in the right circumstances they are phenomenally powerful was such a fun ride.
Also seeing the way that other users of the cards are affected by them, and showing the character's strengths by being able to push through the negative aspects of the cards when pushed to their limits. It showed off an inner strength to these characters that really sink in how much they've grown throughout the course of the story.
What we could have done without
Now just like any other story it wasn't perfect. There are a few things that I thought were just thrown in there to add extra pages. Like we meet a society of individuals who are living outside of the reaching hand of the Rowan Kings, who are surviving within the forest shrouded in mists... And we spend a whopping 10 minutes there. Like it had so much potential to be so interesting. It starts so many cool conversations to have, and then it's just brushed over and forgotten. It really could have been taken out of the book and not affected the plot in any substantial way. That might just be a me thing though, cuz I'm not a huge fan of travel books. Where the entire plot is just getting from point A to point b and, oh no unforeseen circumstance that slowed us down? However are we going to get there on time?
If I'm going to have to read about travel I want each moment to feel like it meant something, so unnecessary detours like that really take me out of the story.
In a similar vein to that I feel like Emery (I literally had to look up his name cuz I forgot what it was) was such a non-character given that the entire reason anyone is doing anything is to save him. Really all we know about Emery is that if he touches you he can see the future (kind of sort of) and that he's frail. But there's nothing in the story that really shows us the connection that they have to him, other than the text simply telling us that they do. I would have liked to see more interactions with his family, with Ravyn, really just something that made him feel like a character and less like a prop.
Those are really my only hang ups, otherwise I absolutely adored the story. I thought it wrapped everything up nicely. It lived up to my expectations, and it is something that I will definitely recommend to others. My one regret is that I didn't get to Buddy read it with my friend who I read one dark window with. But because of that I do have a list of spoilers without context for any of you who would like to enjoy those!
SPOILERS WITHOUT CONTEXT
So you know that one scene from bridgerton season 2 where Anthony falls in the lake? If you know you know....... Yeah that or something similar happens like four times. These men are getting dropped in lakes left and right, and I for one was here for it!
You know how in the first book (and this one too) people were constantly making comments about how distinctive Ravyn's nose is? Yeah that's plot relevant.
There are significantly less mentions of how warm Ravyn's hands are. (If you're looking for a drinking game then read one dark window and take a shot every time Elseph mentions how warm Ravyn's hands are, or someone mentions his nose)
Moderate: Death, Emotional abuse, Physical abuse, Violence, Death of parent, Injury/Injury detail
Minor: Addiction, Alcoholism, Misogyny, Self harm, Alcohol, Sexual harassment, Classism