Reviewed by Silvara on
I received this book for free from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.
This series just keeps getting better with every book. It also gets a little darker as well.
I love the Elementals. Winter has been my favorite since book 1, but in this book we also get to meet more powerful Elementals like Ocean. We learn that there are in fact, other Elementals with the same name in different parts of the world. We get to meet Air and Fire, who are not the same Air and Fire from the Lakeside Courtyard. The ponies also make reappearances and get to come out to play.
Meg is getting steadier in some ways. She isn't having a melt-down every few chapters. She is still sometimes feeling overwhelmed, but she's learning how to cope and not cut every time the buzzing in her skin gets loud. I really liked the way the cards were used, and the hints about how the Trailblazer Deck will work.
There have been references to "Namid's teeth and claws" before, but we actually get to experience that in this book. Even Simon is a bit rattled, Vlad too at one point. It helps set the tone about just how bad things have gotten.
This book isn't slow at all. But at the same time, it isn't the action-packed roller coaster ride of some parts of the previous books. We're shown what's going on in more areas than just Lakeside. Hope and Jean make prophecies of their own. The various humans that work with the terra indigene start stockpiling food and other items that may soon be hard to acquire. And of course, the HFL starts making their moves.
This is totally one of those series I will be re-reading, often. And I don't often have time to re-read anymore, so that should tell you right there just how good it is. If you haven't started reading this series yet, you need to start!
This review was originally posted on Fantasy of the Silver Dragon
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 13 January, 2016: Finished reading
- 13 January, 2016: Reviewed
- Started reading
- Finished reading
- 13 January, 2016: Reviewed