Heir of Fire

592 pages

English language

Published Sept. 1, 2015

ISBN:
978-1-61963-067-3
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4 stars (4 reviews)

7 editions

My Review of Crown of Midnight

5 stars

The second book in the Throne of Glass series built upon the first and smashed my expectations by a wide margin. While not a literary masterpiece by any stretch, I thought Sarah J. Maas' writing was greatly improved in Crown of Midnight, making for a more engaging read than Throne of Glass. In addition to the general improvement in the writing and storytelling, there's more of everything in this one - intrigue, humor, fight scenes, and yes, romance.

The trio of friends, and sometimes love triangle of Celaena, Chaol, and Dorian all grow by leaps and bounds in this one, while not losing that spark that made them fun, compelling, and sometimes maddening characters to begin with. Celaena remained a badass with skills and a personality to be reckoned with, but I really enjoyed Chaol and Dorian's development in this one. Chaol started the series as a pawn for the …

Review of 'Heir of Fire' on 'Storygraph'

4 stars

Every book I enjoy more than the last. <spoiler> I love Celaena's character development. Even though I really liked Celaena/Chaol in the previous book, I love their developments apart from each other. Chaol couldn't truly love her the way she is and she is moving past Celaena to becone Aelin. I love that nothing is set in stone.

I thought it was obvious Sorscha was a spy but I enjoyed her romance with Dorian, even if in the end she was more of a narrative device to get Dorian to where he is now. 

I'm on the Celaena/Rowan train at full speed.

The only part I didn't love were Manon's chapters. She was so disconnected from the rest of it that I just didn't care.</spoiler>

The more I think about it, the more I like it. It's sort of a transition book. Its function is mainly to put everyone in …

Review of 'Crown of Midnight' on 'Storygraph'

4 stars

This was so much better than Throne of Glass! Celaena's character development is great, and the romance has greatly improved. There are some scenes particularly in regards to the romance that are really beautifully written. The plot is so much more interesting as well. There has been a jump in quality here, so I can't wait to see what the rest of the series will be like. 

<spoiler>I'm not sure I'm still Team Chaol, though. I loved their blooming romance here, up until Nehemia's death, when I didn't think their relationship could ever survive, so I lost interest in it, I guess. However, at the end, when Celaena told him she would have always chosen him, I felt things. So we'll see. I'm full on Team Celaena at the moment, though.</spoiler>

Review of 'Heir of Fire (Throne of Glass, #3)' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

Ugh, I feel so let down. After a weak start to the series, the second book won me over to keep going. At the end of the book, Celaena set out for Wendlyn, and it was my hope that the story would open up, to include world-building elements. Alas, it was not for me. Celaena spends all book in training with the fae Prince Rowan to wake her magic and fae heritage. I found this ridiculously boring. As Rowan is super-brooding, and she's beating herself up because of events in book 2, it was emo and emo, with bouts of violence, and the strong smell of an upcoming love triangle, my least favorite YA fiction trope.

The Rifthold PoVs, mostly Dorian and Chaol were really not that much more interesting. It just felt like very very little was actually happening. The only PoV I actually enjoyed was Manon, a new …