Throne of Glass – Sarah
J Maas
Pages:
404
Publisher:
Bloomsbury
Release
Date: 2nd
August 2012
Edition:
UK proof,
review copy
Meet
Celaena Sardothien. Beautiful. Deadly. Destined for greatness.
In
the dark, filthy salt mines of Endovier, a seventeen-year-old girl is serving a
life sentence. She is a trained assassin, the best of her kind, but she made a
fatal mistake. She got caught.
Young
Captain Westfall offers her a deal: her freedom in return for one huge
sacrifice. Calaena must represent the Prince in a to-the-death tournament –
fighting the most gifted thieves and assassins in the land. Live or die,
Calaena will be free. Win or lose, she’s about to discover her true destiny.
But will her assassin’s heart be melted?
Throne
of Glass is
one of those novels that has had so much pre-publication buzz that I was
slightly hesitant about starting it but it just sounded so good that I gave
in. I’m so glad I did!
My immediate reaction to Throne of Glass was that it felt quite
similar to Maria V Snyder’s Poison Study with
the deal being made to get the protagonist out of prison and the outlawing of
magic. Although I enjoyed Poison Study
I found reading it an effort so I had a few more moments of doubt as I began
reading Sara J Maas’s debut. I really have no idea why as I absolutely adored Throne of Glass and it surpassed Poison Study with ease.
One of the first things that
surprised me about this book was that I couldn’t easily identify which of the
two main male characters would end up as the chief love interest or who she
would ultimately end up with. I think I have a better grasp on it now though
and I really, really hope it’s who I think it is...
With Prince Dorian and Choal, the
Captain of the Royal Guard, being the complete opposite of each other, but each
with some serious appeal, it was very hard to determine which Calaena would
respond to. With this not-quite love triangle came a languorous, slow-burning
romance that was a breath of fresh air and I loved every burning glance, flirtatious comment and electric touch. I also really enjoyed how the romance
aspect of the story allowed Calaena to be a realistic and well-rounded girl. As
well as being a fast, strong (mentally and physically) and quick assassin, she also loves
flirting, beautiful dresses and dances. She’s a real girl and I loved it! It’s
rare to get a character who’s so well-balanced but also not portrayed at
perfect. Sarah J Maas did a really fantastic job with Calaena.
Throne
of Glass has a
healthy dose of mystery that I really wasn’t at all expecting. As soon as
Calaena spotted the Wyrdmarks in the castle grounds I knew they’d have an
important role in the novel but it took until they appeared in Calaena’s room
for me to put together what exactly they were and what they were being used for
and it took me far too long to figure out who was committing the murders. There
was also the question of what the evil in the castle was and how Calaena’s
presence tied in with saving the situation, and that we never concretely
discovered.
There was one theme in Throne of Glass that quite strongly
captured my burgeoning interest in feminism and the treatment and freedom of
women. That was how the traditional treatment of women in fantasy that was
represented in Throne of Glass contrasted
with the female characters that were shining examples of bravery, intelligence,
strength and resilience. It was very obvious to me and it made me so angry that
the simple reason of sex can encourage such thoughts and reactions and made me
glad that while our world today is nowhere near perfect, we’ve come a long way.
All in all, I absolutely adored
Throne of Glass and I’m already
anxiously awaiting the next instalment in the trilogy.
Thank you to Bloomsbury for
providing me with a review copy.
Sophie
I've heard lots of things about Throne of Glass but I wasn't sure if it would be for me - I think you've pursuaded me that it is.
ReplyDeleteI have GOT to read this one next- it sounds amazing! I thought it sounded similar to Poison Study when I originally read the blurb- but I loved that book, so I'm pretty convinced that I will love this one as well.
ReplyDeleteIve heard great things about this book, cant wait to read it! Im glad you loved it!
ReplyDeleteOoh... it sounds really great. I haven't read the Poison Study series but I do have it. I enjoyed the Glass series books so I'm sure I'll like those too but they were long read. Thanks for the recommendation Sophie. I do love a good fantasy novel.
ReplyDeleteI'm not a huge fantasy fan so I've been keeping away from this, but everybody is talking about it!And I think after reading you review, I *need* to get a copy...
ReplyDeleteThis is a great book. I love everything Sarah Maas writes. Her world is fantastic! and I love all of her characters!
ReplyDeleteCleo Rogers (Bankruptcy Lawyer Chicago)
I’ve got to Know if Maas has read the Poison Study series. It was my favorite series for so long and as I’m reading the TOG series I’m shocked by how many similarities exists between the books. It would be amazing if it turned out that my current favorite series was inspired by one of my other favorite series.
ReplyDelete