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Title: Ruin and Rising (The Grisha Book #3)
Author: Leigh Bardugo
Rating: 3 of 5
Page Count: 425
Total Page Count: 189,410
Text Number: 560
Read Because: continuing the series, ebook borrowed from the Multnomah County Library
Review: While recovering from their last confrontation, Alina risks another encounter with the Darkling to quest after the final amplifier. This is the only book of the series that I became invested in. There's backstory provided in the first half that has interesting consequences for the magic system, and a later twist that I genuinely didn't see coming. Alina and Mal's relationship is, at least, less awful than previous books, less focused on jealousy and miscommunication, and so the characters are more engaging; it's also nice to see background characters developed, despite the clunky dialog and horrific view of "bad" trauma survivors. But the ending doesn't work for me. I'm never a fan of characters losing their magic powers, and the resolution is too safe, too happy. This lacks the courage of convictionI'd rather dig into the flexible magic system or see cast and country cope with political repercussions than have the catharsis of a neat, bland ending. It's an above average offering from a middle of the road series, and I don't particularly recommend either.
Author: Leigh Bardugo
Rating: 3 of 5
Page Count: 425
Total Page Count: 189,410
Text Number: 560
Read Because: continuing the series, ebook borrowed from the Multnomah County Library
Review: While recovering from their last confrontation, Alina risks another encounter with the Darkling to quest after the final amplifier. This is the only book of the series that I became invested in. There's backstory provided in the first half that has interesting consequences for the magic system, and a later twist that I genuinely didn't see coming. Alina and Mal's relationship is, at least, less awful than previous books, less focused on jealousy and miscommunication, and so the characters are more engaging; it's also nice to see background characters developed, despite the clunky dialog and horrific view of "bad" trauma survivors. But the ending doesn't work for me. I'm never a fan of characters losing their magic powers, and the resolution is too safe, too happy. This lacks the courage of convictionI'd rather dig into the flexible magic system or see cast and country cope with political repercussions than have the catharsis of a neat, bland ending. It's an above average offering from a middle of the road series, and I don't particularly recommend either.