Reviewed by Angie on
The Dead-Tossed Waves wasn't as creepy as the first book. Gabry isn't on a slow decent into madness. She's having a personal crisis. It's very much a "who am I, what am I doing, who will I be" type of story. Gabry has always wanted to be like her mother, but she learns things that shake her small world to the core. Then she meets Elias who knows all kinds of things about the Mudo that she's never heard before, and it's all just a mess that she doesn't know how to straighten out. I wasn't as invested in her story as Mary's, but I still found her journey into the forest (of course she has to do the reverse path of her mother) very fascinating.
I do think The Dead-Tossed Waves is a worthy sequel. It fills in some of the gaps from the end of the first book in terms of what happened to Mary and her group, but it is a whole new story. The second half was much stronger for me, since that's where all of the action and danger is. It also answers some of my questions about why Mary's village was isolated the way it was. The only thing I can say I really disliked was the romance. I wasn't sold on either love interest at all. I was actually hoping that Gabry wound up being Elias' lost sister! That would have been much better!
Read more of my reviews at Pinkindle Reads & Reviews.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 10 June, 2015: Finished reading
- 10 June, 2015: Reviewed