Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies's Reviews > The Queen of the Tearling

The Queen of the Tearling by Erika Johansen
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What does [that lady] see when she looks in the mirror? Kelsea wondered. How could a woman who looked so old still place so much importance on being attractive? Kelsea saw now that there was something far worse than being ugly: being ugly and thinking you were beautiful.
Because how DARE anyone ugly have confidence in themselves.



When I die, I want inscribed on my gravestone "She Read The Queen of the Tearling." Call me unambitious, but that shall be counted among my proudest accomplishments, because never have I ever read a more painfully long, worthless book.

The copywriter who wrote this book's summary compares it to The Hunger Games and Game of Thrones; they have clearly read neither. They compared to the world-building to that of The Hunger Games. They compared the characters to that of Game of Thrones.

Are you fucking kidding me?

A thousand monkeys typing on a thousand typewriters could write a book that is more similar to those works than anything this book has to offer.

This was also the most intensely painful reading experience I have ever had due to the sheer length of the book, aggravated by the fact that the book just dragged on and on and on without a point. This is the book that doesn't end. A good 30% of the book is devoted to traveling. Not since The Hobbit have I been so fucking bored out of my mind. Bilbo Baggins could have gone there and back again, and then make another round around Middle Earth, and sure, why not---take a few years to flutter around Rivendell chilling with the elves in the time it took this book to go anywhere.

The Summary: Kelsea Raleigh is the new Queen of the Tearling. Her mother, the late Queen Elyssa has died, and it is time for Kelsea to claim the throne. She travels to the new kingdom. She's traveling. She's on a horse. They're slowly making their way to the castle. Slooooooooowly.

Meanwhile, the Red Queen of Mortmesne is wonder where the fuck Kelsea is. She's spent the last 19 years searching for her. Seriously, where the fuck is the girl? Oh, well, the Red Queen will think about that later. Time to fuck some slaves! OH YEAH. GIVE IT TO ME, BABY.

Kelsea's still traveling. Man, her new guards are really, really good looking. Oh, shit, she's kidnapped. But not really, because the kidnappers pretty much let Kelsea wander free.

Oh, whew. She's free. Back to traveling! Whooo! OH YAY, WE'RE AT THE CASTLE. Kelsea makes some fucking stupid decisions and pretty much dooms her country within hours of reaching her new castle.

Meanwhile, Javel, the guard, is telling his story, his sad story of how his wife was lost to him.

Kelsea's throned queen! YAY! She spends a lot of time talking to her advisors. She almost gets killed (several times).

Meanwhile, the priest, Father Tyler, is really, really upset at how his life gets flipped turned upside down.

The Red Queen of Montmesne is fucking more slaves. Where is that dratted Kelsea.

Kelsea thinks she is very plain. She should go on a diet. But no, she shouldn't, because she's plain anyway, and who cares about appearances, anyway. Man, Kelsea wishes she were pretty. As pretty as her maidservant, the one whose beauty is so valued that she got enslaved and raped for it.

Meanwhile, Javel is still doing shit. Talking to people. Getting roped into some random-ass plans.

Father Tyler is still moping around.

The Red Queen's pissed off. That fucking Kelsea. Why does she keep eluding my grasp. And by grasp, the Red Queen means her minion's grasps, since the Red Queen is just too important to do anything about hunting Kelsea herself. Magic, pfft. Ugh, whatever. Let's get ourselves a 7-year old little boy and BLEEP him in the BLEEP BLEEP. That is so not legal.



Javel's still talking somehow.

Kelsea's still talking to people. It sure would be nice if she were pretty. But really, Kelsea doesn't have time to think about that right now. There are more important things at hand. Like insulting a woman in front of the Royal Court.

Fuck, they're traveling AGAIN?!

The end.

765. Mother. Fucking. Pages.

The Setting: IT DOESN'T MAKE ANY MOTHERFUCKING SENSE. I started this book thinking it was a medieval fantasy. It wasn't. It has an old-world feel. It's not. Women are in long dresses. We are riding horses. We're using hawks to hunt. There are kings and queens and magic and castles. What you you mean it's not in the past? What do you mean it's not a fantasy.

THIS IS THE FUTURE? THIS IS A DYSTOPIA? WE USED TO BE THE UNITED STATES AND EUROPE? WHAT THE ACTUAL FUCK? WHAT HAPPENED?

I seriously do not fucking understand this setting. First off, it is fucking lazy, because the retelling of the history is told by mouth, AS A STORY.
“Once upon a time, there was a kingdom called the Tearling. It was founded by a man named William Tear, a utopian who dreamed of a land of plenty for all. But ironically, the Tearling was a kingdom of scarce resources, for the British and Americans had not been fortunate in their choice of landing place."
British. American. This is the motherfucking future, people. How the fuck did we get here? And more importantly. WHERE ARE WE?

Why are all technologies lost? We supposedly got to this place in an event called The Crossing. Where is this place? Are we even on Earth? Why are there so few survivors? This land is called New Europe. We have a town called New London. Did it actually pop up out of the ocean? Why was the old world destroyed? Why did we have to seek refuge in New Europe? Are we so fucking inconsistent that in all the hundreds of fucking years in which we've settled here that we have lost all the motherfucking techologies of today's time in the future. So much that we don't even have the technology for motherfucking PRINTING PRESSES? We have geneticists. But we don't have the technology to buy books.

And why are books rare? Because we motherfucking burned them for fuel when we got here. Despite the motherfucking forests of oaks that surrounds this new land, they fucking burned BOOKS for fuel.
That was what had happened to most of the books that originally came over in the British-American Crossing: the desperate had burned them for fuel or warmth.
There are no doctors. There are, like, 2 doctors in the whole of fucking New London. New civilizations have come up with technology, they've been so much more innovative than this. The Medieval Ages were more advanced than the Tearling, because they don't know how to fucking make gunpowder or cannons.

Seriously. You expect us to retain absolutely fucking NOTHING of the knowledge that we have gained for all these years? Did you choose the motherfucking dumbest pieces of shits to carry over to the New World? Why didn't you choose important people, like scientists, botanists, doctors, instead of a bunch of fucking feeblewitted morons who don't know how to carry over fucking technology from the old world when you crossed over to the new. Who fucking BURN BOOKS FOR FUEL DESPITE BEING SURROUNDED BY TREES.



Fucking dystopian fail.

The Writing: Not since Charles Dickens have I read such verbosity. There is a reason why this book is so long. It is packed to the brim with the most long-winded, irrelevant description of every fucking thing in the world.

Introspection? Sure. This book has it aplenty. Let's describe every single fucking thought that Kelsea has ever fucking had in her head. Kelsea thinks. A lot. Some relevant things. Mostly very, very, very idiotic things that make no fucking different whether they were omitted or not.
Red hair was a recessive gene, and in the three centuries since the Crossing, it had bred slowly and steadily out of the population. Carlin had told Kelsea that some women, and even some men, liked to dye their hair red, since the rare commodity was always valuable. But after about an hour of sneaking looks at the guard, Kelsea became certain that she was looking at a true head of red hair. No dye was that good.
Her dreams? Kelsea thinks about them. Her opinions about the men? Sure, let's have it. Kelsea's insecurity? Sure, let's have several fucking paragraphs on it. Man, her food just tastes fucking terrible tonight. Let's describe her thoughts on the venison in excruciating detail.
Dinner was venison, stringy and only barely edible after roasting over the fire. The deer must have been very old. Kelsea had seen only a few birds and squirrels on their ride through the Reddick, though the greenery was very lush; there could be no lack of water. Kelsea wanted to ask the men about the lack of animals, but she worried that it would be taken as a complaint about the meal.
Man, it's a motherfucking long journey. After all, the traveling alone takes about 30% of the book. LET'S JUST DESCRIBE EVERY SINGLE FREAKING DETAIL ON IT. The houses are built with bricks. LET'S DESCRIBE THE FUCKING BRICKS IN DETAIL.
To the east, Kelsea spotted what must be the house of a noble: a high tower made of red brick. Real brick! Tearling brick was a notoriously poor building material compared to Mortmesne’s, which was made with better mortar and commanded at least a pound per kilo. Carlin had an oven made of real bricks, built for her by Barty, and Kelsea had wondered more than once whether Barty had bought the bricks off the black market from Mortmesne.
DETAILS! DETAILS! DETAILS! We are fucking drowning in details. The clothes of the noblemen! Let's decribe them! One of the ladies wear a hat in the shape of a fish! Let's mention that. And while we're at it, let's make fun of her for it! WILL IT EVER STOP?!

The Guards: Not since Monty Python and the Holy Grail have there ever been such irreverent, incompetent fucking royal guards. They are the most fucking pathetic examples of soldiers I have ever fucking encountered. This is Kelsea. She is one of the last of her royal line. Her life is priceless. She is supposed to be guarded by 9 men. 9 men who are motherfucking blundering assholes because they cannot do anything right.

While they are traveling, the men get drunk and sing bawdy songs instead of securing her guard. They are completely fucking shocked that later on in the journey, they are captured.

While they are traveling, they are caught AGAIN off their guard. Kelsea is forced to flee for her life.

At the castle, while they are supposed to be watching her back. Kelsea gets stabbed---in the back.
...a bolt of pain arrowed all the way down to her toes.
Stabbed, she thought, dazed. Mace didn’t cover my back after all.
Later on, in the bath, Kelsea gets cornered by an assassin! She's almost fucking killed again.

WHERE ARE THE FUCKING NITWITS GUARDING HER?!

Guards?! Guards?! They are supposed to be subservient. They are supposed to be respectful. They are supposed to be odebient. They are not supposed to talk back to her. Oh, sure, they SAY they're not going to talk back to her.
He stared at her without expression. “I say nothing, Lady. That’s why I’m a Queen’s Guard.”
But words mean fucking nothing. Because whatever Mace (real name Lazarus, head of Kelsea's guard) is, it's not fucking subservient. He talks down to her, as if she were an incompetent little girl (well, she is, but she is still the fucking queen). He talks back to her. He disagrees with her. When she's gravely injured, Mace nudges her by poking at her with his foot. Is this the behavior of a guard towards his queen? I don't think so.
Mace’s boot landed in the small of her back, and Kelsea bit her tongue against a scream.
Kelsea: Incompetent nitwit. A heroine who is so astoundingly stupid and unprepared by her fucking mentors that she is unworthy of governing anything but a toy kingdom made of Legos.

I hope Kelsea steps on the pieces. I hope they hurt badly. I hope our aspiring queen is in pain for the torment and the headache and the hangover I experienced while reading this book about one of the most insipid heroine to ever litter the precious pages of a book.

She constantly complains about how plain she is.
But her face was as round and ruddy as a tomato, and—there was no other word for it—plain.
She has the most fucking idiotic thoughts about everything and everything. No subject is too minor for her notice. The rug? Oh, it's probably made of deer hide. Spare me.

She is not a fucking queen. Her guardians are incompetent, because she has been so completely fucking sheltered from the world that she doesn't understand anything, but she still knows things. Somehow. She has never seen alcohol, yet she knows what alcohol smells like. She knows what alcoholism looks like when she sees it in a man. And she revels in being drunk, cause it's just like in a book, y'all!
Kelsea woke with an aching head and a parched mouth, but it wasn’t until breakfast that she realized it was her first hangover. Despite the discomfort, she was charmed to experience something that she’d only read about in a book. An upset stomach was a small price to pay for fiction made real.
She cares SO MUCH for the fate of her people. Kelsea is so incredibly hurt that her people are being sent as slaves to Mortmesne---250 a month---that she is willing to renege on the treaty between their countries. Within hours of her arrival to the capital, Kelsea makes a heroic gesture that completely endangers the peace of two nations. She stops the shipment of slaves. She was warned. She didn't listen. She risks the lives of the entire nation for the sake of a few.
“Lady, the Mort Treaty is specific. There is no appeals process, no outside arbiter. If a single shipment fails to arrive in Demesne on time, the Mort Queen has the right to invade this country and wreak terror. I lived through the last Mort invasion, Lady, and I assure you, Mhurn wasn’t exaggerating the carnage. Before you take action, consider the consequences.”
Despite being plain, Kelsea is terribly judgmental of looks. She criticizes an old, ugly woman for daring to look beautiful. She is envious of another woman's beauty, despite the fact that that woman's beauty got her raped.

Kelsea complains a lot about the extravagances at court. The pointless waste of money. So much that she is willing to waste her valuable men's time and her own resources into traveling 2 weeks to get her books from her old home. And right away. It must be done right away.

The Fetch: A criminal. The projected love interest. A Robin Hood? Not quite. You see, Robin Hood steals from the rich and actually DISTRIBUTES it to the poor. The Fetch? Nah.
“Well, he’s a hero to the common people, Lady. Every piece of rich man’s fortune lost endears him to the poor.”
“Does he distribute the money to the poor?”
“No, Lady.”
So, um. Exactly HOW is he the hero of the common people?

Naturally, she should turn him in. Kelsea is the queen, she should set an example to her people. Put criminals where they belong.

Or not.
Kelsea took a deep breath. “I wouldn’t betray him for any number of pounds.”
“Ah, Christ.”
Emma, Emma Watson. I heard that you have signed up for this project. I adore you. You are brilliant. You are gorgeous. You are a goddess, and you have won my heart ever since you stepped onto the screens of Harry Potter, with your disapproving frown and your frizzy hair, far more beautiful than Hermione Watson could ever be. But I adored you then, I love you now, and I hope for your sake that the movie adaptation exceeds every aspect of the book, because the book itself has almost no substance to offer.

I can't even hate this book because it tries so hard. It is the equivalent of having your 6-year old niece draw a picture of you. Sure, you look like a motherfucking moose with butterfly wings for some fucking reason, but hey, it's an A for effort, right?

Quotes were taken from an uncorrected galley proof subject to change in the final edition.
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Reading Progress

December 19, 2013 – Shelved as: to-read
December 19, 2013 – Shelved
January 21, 2014 – Started Reading
January 21, 2014 –
page 15
3.46% "Approved for ARC. Here we go!"
January 22, 2014 –
page 50
11.52% "My god, this book is slow. And the heroine makes the dumbest observations. Man, he's good looking---for an old guy. That guy's younger, and handsome---30? But too old. THEY'RE TREATING ME POLITELY. THAT MEANS THEY DISRESPECT ME.

Slooooooooooow. Hunger Games? What Hunger Games?"
January 24, 2014 –
page 120
27.65% "I don't understand this book. The main character is the most innocent, most untrained Queen I have ever fucking met.
The world building makes no sense, because what I originally thought was a medieval high fantasy has turned out to be Earth, because America existed, and now we have New Europe.

I need a lot of alcohol right now."
January 24, 2014 –
page 150
34.56% "I'm breaking out the gin right now. I think I need it."
January 24, 2014 –
page 150
34.56% "WHAT THE FUCK? THEY JUST TOLD A PARABLE.

A man has a sick son. Incurable. A mysterious man shows up and offers to cure the sick son in exchange for curing him. The son gets better. The father doesn't want to give up the son's finger to the guy so HE CUTS IT OFF HIMSELF?! WHAT THE FUCK?!

And the lesson: you cannot cheat death. WHAT DOES THAT EVEN MEAN?!"
January 24, 2014 –
page 170
39.17% "I AM DRNKK. But what a coicnidence because geuss who eles is drunk?!?! YEAH! Our fucking heroien because she's hung over and clearly very pruod of it since she's living an experinence in a book!! WUT?!

...she realized it was her first hangover. Despite the discomfort, she was charmed to experience something that she’d only read about in a book. An upset stomach was a small price to pay for fiction made real."
January 24, 2014 –
page 175
40.32% "WHY IS NOTHNIGN HAPPENING EVER. THEYREV BEEN TRAVELING ALL FUCKING TIME AND NOTHING. NOTHING IS HAPPENING. I'M 25% INTO ETH BOOK. WHY IS NOTHING HAPPENING?!"
January 24, 2014 –
page 180
41.47% "THERE ARE NO SWAMPS IN ENGLNAD. WHY ARE THERE SERFS IN ENALGHD. I S THIS SUPPOSED TO BE IN THE FUTURE?! WHY DID WE RESRVERT TO THE PASR?!"
January 24, 2014 –
page 200
46.08% "Good news: my inebriation is wearing off. Bad news: the book is still bad.

YOU'RE FALLING INTO INSTA-LOVE WITH A CRIMINAL. YOU ARE A QUEEN. SNAP OUT OF IT. HE AIN'T NO ROBIN HOOD.

She should create a likeness of the Fetch at the earliest opportunity, or describe him to someone who could truly draw. And yet she knew that she would do neither of these things."
January 25, 2014 –
page 260
59.91% "YOUR COUNTRY IS STARVING. YOUR PEOPLE ARE DYING. YOU OWE ALLEGIANCE TO THE COUNTRY OF MORTMESNE.

In order to stave off war between your pitiful, weak, sorry excuse of a country, you routinely send them shipments of slaves from your country. Sacrifice a few to save many.

What do you fucking do the very instance you set foot into your capital? WHY, FREE ALLLLLL THE SLAVES. FUCKING BRILLIANT. START A FUCKING WAR!"
January 25, 2014 –
page 280
64.52% "Your people are dying of starvation! You have boldly declared to see them fed! You feel strongly about this! Your country is so poor.

So uh, what do you do when you see your bookshelves are empty in your new castle?

"Bookshelves weren’t meant to be empty."

WHY, ASK FOR ALL THE BOOKS TO BE SHIPPED BACK TO YOUR CASTLE. IT'S ONLY A 2 WEEK JOURNEY."
January 26, 2014 –
page 285
65.67% "Alcoholism, if not something more exotic; Kelsea suddenly knew, the knowledge coming from nowhere, that if there was an expensive vice out there, her uncle had tried it.

Oh, you suddenly know, eh? You've never seen alcohol, but you know how alcoholism looks."
January 26, 2014 –
page 300
69.12% "DESCRIPTIONS! EVERYTHING NEEDS A DESCRIPTION!"
January 26, 2014 –
page 305
70.28% "Stabbed, she thought, dazed. Mace didn’t cover my back after all.

You are the most fucking incompetent troop of guards I have ever seen in my life."
January 26, 2014 –
page 310
71.43% "Mace’s boot landed in the small of her back, and Kelsea bit her tongue against a scream.

WHY ARE YOU LETTING YOUR GUARDS KICK YOU?!

You are the most fucking incompetent troop of guards I have ever seen in my life."
January 28, 2014 –
page 550
100% "So far, we've redecorating the castle, and the most fucking incompetent guards EVER has almost let the Queen die. Again.

Only 200 more pages to go. God save me.

How is this like The Hunger Games, again?"
January 28, 2014 – Shelved as: ya
January 28, 2014 – Shelved as: why-do-i-hate-myself
January 28, 2014 – Shelved as: weight-issues
January 28, 2014 – Shelved as: try-hard
January 28, 2014 – Shelved as: paranormal
January 28, 2014 – Shelved as: magic
January 28, 2014 – Shelved as: dystopian
January 28, 2014 – Shelved as: fantasy
January 28, 2014 – Shelved as: boring-main-character
January 28, 2014 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-50 of 359 (359 new)


Butterfly what's happening??


Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies I am having so much trouble with this book. It is so incredibly boring. I'll try to finish it by Wednesday :(


Butterfly no no, tell me. I read the blob and I don't understand how the awesome Guard are kicking her as if she was a dog??


Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies They're just kicking her. She is injured, and they're just kicking her to get her to focus. That's it.


Butterfly Kicking?? to get her to focus?? there are other ways to get someone focus.


message 6: by Jasmine (new)

Jasmine I cannot wait to read your review.
And delete this from my to-read list. Curse you, Emma Watson, for pulling me in in the first place.


message 7: by Katherine (new)

Katherine We'll be eagerly waiting for your ranting (evil grin)...


Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies At least you didn't have to read through 700 pages of it.

My head seriously hurts. I took about 5 pages of notes for this book.


message 10: by Kribu (new)

Kribu I do really like the cover.

.. I have a feeling the cover is the best part of the book. Possibly the only good part. Sigh.

This does sound like something that might make a decently entertaining (if not amazing or deep) film, I suppose, especially as it would need to be massively condensed to fit into ~2 hours? In this case, I'm thinking it might not be a bad thing at all.


Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies In this case, watch the movie, skip the book.


message 12: by Nila (new)

Nila It sounds to me like this is going to be a series. Maybe by book 5 or so, there will be some point to this story. It sure sounds boring. ... Once again, you read these huge books so we don't have to. Thank you!


Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies I think it's going to be a 7-part series, and I'm pretty freaking sick of these 7-book deals. There was one last year...The Bone Season that had a lot of hype as well, and that was a dud, for me.

To each his own, I suppose.


message 14: by Basuhi (new)

Basuhi You totally weren't kidding about the long part.
Just out of curiosity, is it the longest one ?


Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies Yeah, I think this has been my longest to date >_>


message 16: by Julio (new)

Julio Genao Greatest sentence ever written in the history of the English language:

Kelsea had seen only a few birds and squirrels on their ride through the Reddick, though the greenery was very lush; there could be no lack of water.

Followed closely by:

"The End."


message 18: by Julio (new)

Julio Genao I'm still lawling at how you pretty much compared this book to macaroni art


message 19: by Nila (new)

Nila Khanh, I'm sure others have asked, but I must know. Why, oh why, do you do this?


message 20: by Yzabel (new)

Yzabel Ginsberg I didn't read it, but why did it have to be a dystopia? It seems fantasy would've served the purpose just as well.


Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies Nila: Emma Watson ;_; 7 book series. Game of Throne promise. I was hooked in.

Yzabel: Exactly. It would have worked better without all the inconsistencies.


message 22: by Nila (new)

Nila Khanh (The Wrath) wrote: "Nila: Emma Watson ;_; 7 book series. Game of Throne promise. I was hooked in.

Yzabel: Exactly. It would have worked better without all the inconsistencies."


But Khanh, doesn't it seem that at least 80% of these books are ghastly or awful in some other way, and you still read them all the way through and throw away quality brain cells by doing thoughtful reviews. I love your reviews but I wonder so often why you do it. ... I am being impertinent. Thanks for doing so much heavy lifting for all of us.


message 23: by Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies (last edited Jan 29, 2014 12:45AM) (new) - rated it 1 star

Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies There are certain scenarios in books that just draw me in. It's just the case that these books turn out to be bad. I don't set out to deliberately read bad books :(

Also, I try not to DNF ARCs, since they were given to me for review.


message 24: by Selah (new) - added it

Selah Likely because dystopia is all the rage now. It sells, so make the horrible fantasy novel into a horrible fantasy/dystopia for moar profit


Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies Everyone is trying to create a franchise. I blame Hunger Game's success >_>


message 26: by Yzabel (new)

Yzabel Ginsberg Oh, I wouldn't mind dystopia. I quite like such stories. The real problem is that a lot of authors don't understand what "dystopia" means, and can't build believable dystopian worlds. If they did that, I'd be happy to read their books.


Natalie You write fantastic reviews! Ha. I'm morbidly curious about this one...for Emma Watson's sake...


Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies I say stick around for the movie. I don't know many people willing to read a massive book like this for nothing >_>


Natalie Khanh (The Wrath) wrote: "I say stick around for the movie. I don't know many people willing to read a massive book like this for nothing >_>"

Yeah, maybe I should. I barely have time to read at all at the moment, so I shouldn't waste it!


message 30: by Figgy (new) - rated it 1 star

Figgy THIS IS THE FUTURE? THIS IS A DYSTOPIA? WE USED TO BE THE UNITED STATES AND EUROPE? WHAT THE ACTUAL FUCK? WHAT HAPPENED?

So... It's like Obernewtyn, but not as well thought out, and without any cool super powers...? And LOOOONGER.


Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies I'm so happy that I finished this book and wrote a semi coherent review for it. There were just so many problems. I had to finish it. It was an albatross on my shoulders, haunting me until I was done.


message 32: by Julio (new)

Julio Genao *annoyed*


message 33: by KL (new) - rated it 1 star

KL (Cat) As always, a most entertaining and informative review. Worth two weeks of waiting and rereading those status updates :)


message 34: by Jules (new) - added it

Jules (Never enough time to read) A bit of an epic review! Definitely not a book I'm going to rush to read. It's becoming a pet hate of mine when blurbs compare one book to another because usually it doesn't live up to the expectations that it sets, obviously this is another example.


message 35: by Yzabel (new)

Yzabel Ginsberg Jules wrote: "It's becoming a pet hate of mine when blurbs compare one book to another because usually it doesn't live up to the expectations that it sets, obviously this is another example. "

One of the things I learnt when I researched how to write a book blurb: never compare your book to another one. (Obviously, the marketing people can afford to do it, since they're not the authors... but I wish they'd refrain: half the time, they're completely off the mark anyway.)


message 36: by Kuroi (new)

Kuroi LOL. Hilarious review. But the blurb alone was enough to put me off:

"But though she may be inexperienced and sheltered, Kelsea is not defenseless: Around her neck hangs the Tearling sapphire, a jewel of immense magical power; and accompanying her is the Queen’s Guard, a cadre of brave knights led by the enigmatic and dedicated Lazarus. Kelsea will need them all to survive a cabal of enemies who will use every weapon—from crimson-caped assassins to the darkest blood magic—to prevent her from wearing the crown."

It sounds like half the book already. And its only the second paragraph.


message 37: by Katie (new) - added it

Katie Thank you from saving me from reading this book. And very entertaining review. I now have the fresh prince of bell air theme song stuck in my head :)


message 38: by Bookfanatic (new)

Bookfanatic That sounds awful! They lost me after that bit about the 7 year old boy and what would be done to him..I can't read stuff like that...


message 39: by Sama (new)

Sama I'm almost (almost) tempted to read this book just because it sounds so ridiculous


Bonnie 765 pages?! Holy shit the finished copy is said to only be 448. Lol That's some massive editing that sounds to be dearly needed.


message 41: by Debbie (new) - added it

Debbie Aaaaaannn I'm not looking forward to this novel anymore!
Thanks for the heads up!


message 42: by pampampampampam (new)

pampampampampam So is that vague thing that is pretending to be a plot point supposed to reference the Athenian tribute to Crete? Because that's a Hunger Games ripoff right there.
How this is marketed as "dystopia" is completely beyond me. Why would they want to make a movie out of this??????


Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies Cat: Thanks! It took a lot of alcohol :)

Jules: Thank you!

Yzabel: Yep, it creates all sorts of expectations that just piss the reader off if they're not followed through.

Krishna: Even the book summary is terrifyingly long.

Katie: Lol! I love that song

Bookfanatic: There's not a lot of violence, but there are some graphic parts.

Sama: DO IT! Lol!

Bonnie: I think the page counts vary from edition

Abbe: Glad to help!

Pamela: I don't even know. I'm sick of dystopians that revert back to the past.


message 44: by Hailee (new)

Hailee *blinks*
*removes from to-read shelf*
*instead puts under kill-it-with-fire shelf*


Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies But if you killed it with fire, you'd be the same as the settlers in the book who burned books for fuel ;)


message 46: by Mindy (new)

Mindy This is a major cluster fuck of a book. I can't believe you had to suffer through 756 pages. That would of taken me 3 months. Also, with the advent of ebooks would there even be real books to burn that far in the future?


Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies Nope. No burning. No throwing across the room in a fit of rage ;_; I do miss print sometimes.


message 48: by Jill (new)

Jill Great, detailed review but I'm mostly obsessed with your hilarious drunken status updates. Any book that makes you turn to alcohol should be stalwartly avoided! I wonder if the film adaptation will even go into production if most readers react like you do...


Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies If it's to be made into a movie, I'm sure it'll be significantly better.

I mean, look at what Peter Jackson did for The Hobbit. There's done serious deviation there, but damn if it doesn't make for a fun movie.


message 50: by Samantha (new) - added it

Samantha Love this review. The Hermione GIFs are great and make sense since you said Emma Watson is set to star in the movie. I completely agree with you about The Hobbit and Dickens. Boring.


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