Strange the Dreamer by Laini Taylor

Strange the Dreamer (Strange the Dreamer, #1)

by Laini Taylor

The dream chooses the dreamer, not the other way around - and Lazlo Strange, war orphan and junior librarian, has always feared that his dream chose poorly. Since he was five years old he's been obsessed with the mythic lost city of Weep, but it would take someone bolder than he to cross half the world in search of it. Then a stunning opportunity presents itself, in the person of a hero called the Godslayer and a band of legendary warriors, and he has to seize his chance to lose his dream forever.


What happened in Weep two hundred years ago to cut it off from the rest of the world? What exactly did the Godslayer slay that went by the name of god? And what is the mysterious problem he now seeks help in solving?


The answers await in Weep, but so do more mysteries - including the blue-skinned goddess who appears in Lazlo's dreams. How did he dream her before he knew she existed? And if all the gods are dead, why does she seem so real?


In this sweeping and breathtaking new novel by National Book Award finalist Laini Taylor, author of the New York Times bestselling Daughter of Smoke & Bone trilogy, the shadow of the past is as real as the ghosts who haunt the citadel of murdered gods. Fall into a mythical world of dread and wonder, moths and nightmares, love and carnage.

Reviewed by alindstadtcorbeax on

5 of 5 stars

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Star Rating: —> 5 [beautiful] Stars

This was/ is everything.

Holy Moly. I feel like I must feel every single feeling that has ever existed in the history of feelings right now, and so very, very, deeply, at that. Too deeply for my own good...

My God, I’m... I don’t even know what, exactly, I’m feeling right now ! I’m in love. Im in love, but I’m also just so furious in this moment (because how dare I be given everything over the course of 500+ pages only to end this first half of the duology feeling as if everything has been ripped from me all at once?)

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 22 August, 2019: Finished reading
  • 22 August, 2019: Reviewed