Post from the Queen of Shadows (Throne of Glass, #4) forum
lucamuca is interested in reading...

The Poppy War (The Poppy War, #1)
R.F. Kuang
Post from the Queen of Shadows (Throne of Glass, #4) forum
I keep wondering how is it possible that ACOTAR and TOG came from the same author? They are written so differently...
Post from the Queen of Shadows (Throne of Glass, #4) forum
lucamuca is interested in reading...

Cujo: A Novel
Stephen King
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Red Rising (Red Rising Saga, #1)
Pierce Brown
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The Sword of Kaigen
M.L. Wang
Post from the Queen of Shadows (Throne of Glass, #4) forum
lucamuca started reading...

Queen of Shadows (Throne of Glass, #4)
Sarah J. Maas
lucamuca finished a book

Gallant
Victoria Schwab
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Gallant
Victoria Schwab
lucamuca DNF'd a book

The Testaments (The Handmaid's Tale, #2)
Margaret Atwood
lucamuca wrote a review...
Giving a critique on Assasin's Blade is a pretty uncommon experience, since the reading order varies in a lot of cases. For me it was the fourth book, right after Heir of Fire. The very first apparent difference was Celaena's character. As a starter book her behavior would've thrown me off, if not cokpletely driving me away from the series. However after immersing myself in the world of Erilea, my surprise came from how different she acted compared to her later self. And this one is a huge cookie point for Sarah, because she wonderfully managed to capture a 17 year old's naïveté, and ignorence. The side characters were also pretty nice, I loved the interactions with characters who won't play huge roles later, but it builds so much of the world, i have a soft spot for these kinds of stories. I also quite liked how plain Arobynn's motives revealed to be, it is very realistic. What was definitely not realistic is how her relationship with Sam was handled. The author obviously could never write every single moment they had spent together, but this way it has holes in it. Im fine with interpreting, but even then i have questions why did this turn out the way it did. The story however is where i start having a problem with, as it was highly predictable. The author tried to have small hints, but those only work as a surprise if you have 600 pages to hide them in. Anyways i liked to see how each of these tales impacted Celaena.
I would definitely recommend to NOT start with this book if you want to fully enjoy the TOG series.