Reviewed by HekArtemis on
Which is odd I guess, most of the time second books suffer from, well, second book syndrome lol.
This one sadly did not explain how Jorg never learned of his half-brothers death and/or why he never heard of or suspected the cause of the babys death.
The chapter that looked at Jorgs experience with the Bishop was interesting, except one infuriating little piece where he mansplains to Katherine what it was like to experience such a thing, like SHE DOESN'T ALREADY KNOW YOU STUPID IDIOTIC MAN. This was the first and only time in these books where I was actually upset with the author for including something in the book. Every other horrible thing that happened made me feel things about and/or for the characters, but this one pulled me out of the story and I felt like it was coming directly from Mark and not from Jorg. It was not pleasant.
I also struggled a little with Chellas scenes in this book. Coming from King where we go from Jorg to Katherine, and now we have Jorg to Chella, eh, I like Katherine way more. I was also a little miffed with the role of Miana in this one, she has almost no role but the role of Jorgs pregnant little wife. She was amazing in King, despite having little page time, but in this one she was far more in the background when she was on page. It was sad.
Hmmm I guess I had a little more issues with this book than the other two, but it was still a good book and I did enjoy it over all. There were several laugh out loud moments (this is why I like Prince the least, it had very little humour in comparison to King and Emperor). Many times I had to be impressed by Jorgs manipulation of the people around him, while still technically playing by the rules. And again we see him making friends, he is not just a killer, he can play nice when it's needed. And best of all, more world building. In this one we get to see a lot more of the old world which is super interesting.
I have no idea how Red Queens War will compare to this trilogy, but I plan to read that some time this year.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- Finished reading
- 25 June, 2019: Reviewed