Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Early Unraveling: The Bitter Kingdom by Rae Carson

The Bitter Kingdom Rae Carson Fire and Thorns #3
Title: The Bitter Kingdom
Series: Fire and Thorns Book Three
Author: Rae Carson
Publication Date: August 27, 2013

The epic conclusion to Rae Carson's Fire and Thorns trilogy. The seventeen-year-old sorcerer-queen will travel into the unknown realm of the enemy to win back her true love, save her country, and uncover the final secrets of her destiny.

Elisa is a fugitive in her own country. Her enemies have stolen the man she loves in order to lure her to the gate of darkness. As she and her daring companions take one last quest into unknown enemy territory to save Hector, Elisa will face hardships she's never imagined. And she will discover secrets about herself and her world that could change the course of history. She must rise up as champion-a champion to those who have hated her most.
  photo B1426D4C-9EEC-4C0B-A1FB-90524B03C0CA-1855-000001A1E82B3B3E_zps17d98f4d.jpg  photo KoboIcon_zps515cdc1a.jpg




***




My Thoughts



A copy was provided through Edelweiss and the Publisher in exchange for an honest review

We have come to the end of the line with this trilogy. Can't really say I'm too sad, not because of it was bad, as my reviews will reflect I have really enjoyed these books, but I'm not sad because the end was satisfying enough that I can accept it and let the characters and their world go.

Book endings are always stressful to must of us I think. We are both excited to see how it ends and dreading it because it is the end, but also because, what if it isn't the ending we wanted it? That's a whole other layer of problems right there. Carson did a great job with Bitter Kingdom in this sense. The whole book was both predictable at some points and surprising at others, just the right mix of both, so you aren't left with complete uncertainty but also not lacking that nice feeling of being surprised.

This is not to say that I didn't have any issues with it. I did. But they weren't very big ones. There was Alodia for one. I have never liked her since the first book. I don't care that she has done what she has to protect Elisa. I just can't stand the woman and unfortunately she was in this book briefly  but long enough for me to get annoyed. (view spoiler)

My other issue is the service to God that Elisa is supposed to do. It was utter crap in my opinion. So damn anticlimactic. I mean she has been doing soo much for her country and then we finally get to her service to God and it turns out that it hasn't been any of the major things she has done or still has to do. No, it was just some random task that had nothing to do with anything for the moment, and I just can't accept that. The characters themselves questioned it, and I understand the whole point but I still don't like it. I would have been fine if maybe there had been some kind of epilogue showing the importance of that one thing that Elisa was tasked to do. That would have been pretty cool. Maybe Carson can write a short story afterwards? *hint hint* ;)

Besides those two issues, I loved the rest of the book. There was sneaking around, fighting, death, intrigue, and of course love. Which reminds me! What the hell is wrong with Mara?! Why does she keep refusing Belén?! If the handmaiden thing is what's keeping her back, she is a a coward and an idiot, and worst than Elisa when it comes to love. So much shit they go through and she still refuses!! I just don't get it. Hector was acting all insecure at the start as well, but he got over it quickly enough thanks to Elisa being her usual stern self. 

I love Elisa :) Love her scheming and planning, how she gets things done, and trusts people when most others wouldn't. She totally kicked ass in this book and not just politically speaking, but literally. I specially liked how she came up with the whole plan with the Inviernos. She doesn't need a knight in shinning armor to come save her all the time. She does it herself perfectly well and it shows through out the whole book. Even when she has Hector she still doesn't under-develop into an incapable person all of a sudden cause she has a guy with her like in so many other books. She is a strong person and queen, both with and without her Godstone.

While some might think that everything ended up getting tied in a neat bow, it wasn't completely neat. There was a lot of underhanded things that had to be done to get to where they are. It didn't just magically appear all of a sudden which is why I'm so satisfied with how this trilogy ended. If you are looking for a great YA Fantasy with a strong heroine then don't look any further!

So...

Would I Recommend it?





***


Other books in the Fire and Thorns Trilogy:

  1. The Girl of Fire and Thorns
  2. The Crown of Embers
  3. The Bitter Kingdom

4 comments:

  1. Nice review. Trilogies stress me out, too. I've procrastinate reading the last in a series for months because if it doesn't go the way I want, I won't know what to do haha

    ReplyDelete
  2. I'm eager to get my hands on a copy of this book but I'm also afraid because its so hard to say goodbye to a series I love. Great review! It's making me super excited for The Bitter Kingdom. :>

    ReplyDelete
  3. Ah yes. I have a very hard time finishing up series as it is. It took me weeks to finally pick up Unbreakable by Elizabeth Norris lol.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thanks :) Hope you like it as much as I did!

    ReplyDelete

^ Scroll to Top