Reviewed by Angie on
I'm not sure if liked Poisoned Blade more than the first book. There's certainly a lot more going on and it spans a lot more time. I never got bored and just had to keep reading. But at times, there was maybe too much going on. Jes is still running The Fives, which she loves, even if she hates the situation that put her there. She has to find ways to secretly support her mother and siblings without getting them killed. She also gets thrown into a treasonous plot, and there's no way knowing what she knows will end well for her. On top of that, there's a war and it's a lot closer to home than she first thought.
What I really liked about Poisoned Blade was how big of a role Jes's mixed heritage played. We learn in the first book that Efians and Patrons are not allowed to marry and children of these unions are treated like crap. This time we see even more of how tensions between these two cultures make it hard on Jes and other mixed people to get by. There's a weirdo doctor who wants to study them like they're some kind of subspecies. Then there's the fact that no one trusts Jes because they don't know which side she's loyal to, and she doesn't want to choose one parent over the other. But she has to find a way to be true to herself while also making sure she's on the right side of the these battles.
Poisoned Blade was a worthy sequel. Instead of having a race against the clock type of plot, we're thrown in the midst of war and political intrigue. There's a lot of stuff building which suddenly comes crashing down toward the end and nothing is how it seems.
Read more of my reviews at Pinkindle Reads & Reviews.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 3 August, 2016: Finished reading
- 3 August, 2016: Reviewed