The Bitter Twins (The Winnowing Flame Trilogy 2)

The Bitter Twins (The Winnowing Flame Trilogy 2)

Taschenbuch
4.02

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Beschreibung

**Winner of the British Fantasy Award for Best Fantasy Novel**

The electrifying second book in the award-winning Winnowing Flame trilogy - the sequel to The Ninth Rain. Epic fantasy for fans of Robin Hobb and Adrian Tchaikovsky.

'An absolute joy to read... jam-packed with breath-taking inventiveness' James Oswald

'Incredible heroines... incredible fantasy... Escapism at its finest' Stylist

The Ninth Rain has fallen. The Jure'lia are awake. Nothing can be the same again.

Tormalin the Oathless and the fell-witch Noon have their work cut out rallying the first war-beasts to be born in Ebora for three centuries. But these are not the great winged warriors of old. Hatched too soon and with no memory of their past incarnations, these onetime defenders of Sarn can barely stop bickering, let alone face an ancient enemy who grow stronger each day.

The key to uniting them, according to the scholar Vintage, may lie in a part of Sarn no one really believes exists - a distant island, mysteriously connected to the fate of two legendary Eborans who disappeared long ago.

But finding it will mean a perilous journey in a time of war, while new monsters lie in wait for those left behind.

Join the heroes of THE NINTH RAIN as they battle a terrible evil, the likes of which Sarn has never known.

What readers are saying about THE BITTER TWINS:

'The sequel to the brilliant Ninth Rain kicks it up a notch with more action, scarier monsters and a more expansive story'

'Be ready for some great reveals and twists that may break your heart, but that will overall leave you fist pumping the air'

'The world building continues to blow my mind
Haupt-Genre
N/A
Sub-Genre
N/A
Format
Taschenbuch
Seitenzahl
624
Preis
15.99 €

Beiträge

1
Alle
4

“Our armies, with their shining armour and singing swords are rust and dusty bones. We are like... an echo of something that came before.” It is difficult for me to say if I enjoyed The Bitter Twins more than its predecessor. Some of the problems I had with The Ninth Rain (e.g. the enormous amount of exposition through epigraphs) were toned down to such an extend that I cannot say that they were an issue at all anymore. The one thing I felt somehow suffered though was the overall pacing and direction, especially during the first half of the book. I understand that the characters themselves were in a way lost and in search of a purpose but that just made the first half feel like there was big questionmark hovering over the main cast that could be easily resolved by them not being so, I don't know, reactionary? But for all the criticisms I have of the first half I would still like to praise it. The dark horror elements were better than ever and seeing the world expanding its science-fiction roots was a joy to behold. As always, the characters were the center piece of the story and with the new lets call them companions, to not spoil anything here, the cast felt more dynamic and brimming with life than ever before. That being said, Vintage and her story was, sadly, the weakest for me, to a point where even the big twists and turns fell flat. Similarly flat fell Tormalin's. But this could be due to to him having way less to say in this book ( other than being horny and or sassy of course ) and with the expanded cast that span at often great distances that might have been unvoidable. “This pain is not a weakness. It is strength. Our grief binds us. Do you feel it?” The second half was filled with action and reveals at every corner of Sarn. Every mystery was followed by a metaphorical gut punch that me and the characters just had to live with, since there was no time for grief or questions, just decisiveness and action. I loved the character development of every single pro- and antagonist. I loved the mysteries that when revealed made way for even more questions about the world and universe Jenn Williams created. I loved how personal this apocalypse was to each person fighting in it. Although I cannot say which book I enjoyed more, Jen Williams made me care so much that I want to do nothing more than read the last book in the trilogy and find out what is going to happen. And if this is not enough for you to start reading The Winnowing Flame Trilogy then I don't know how anyone could persuade you.

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