Papelitos 📚 reviewed Trono de cristal (I) by Sarah J. Maas
Review of 'Trono de cristal (I)' on 'Goodreads'
3 stars
A ver, es Sarah y siempre mola, pero este primer libro es bastante flojillo y la primera mitad se me hizo un pelín cuesta arriba
423 pages
Chinese language
Published Feb. 19, 2015 by Cheng bang wen hua shi ye gu fen you xian gong si, Jian duan chu ban.
二十四名來自各地的盜賊、刺客和戰士,十三週嚴峻殘酷、暴虐無道的訓練和試驗。一場以鋼鐵意志相爭的生死決鬥,將鍛造出一個無所畏懼的強大靈魂。
在瑟蕾娜‧薩達錫恩被同伴背叛之前,天地之大足以讓她四海為家。如今為了掙脫鹽礦裡的囚徒生活,她不得不參加皇室舉辦的生死決鬥,以性命作代價爭取擔任國王御前鬥士的名譽,也許之後能重獲自由。她曾是亞達蘭王國最強的刺客,但經歷過受人奴役、虐待的一年後,她儘管聰敏機智如昔,體力卻不比常人。她原以為恢復體力與磨練刺殺技巧是當前最緊要的任務,沒想到宮廷裡權謀暗鬥之狠毒竟遠遠超出她的預期。邪惡將玻璃城堡過往的驕傲歷史蒙上一層陰霾,太多陰謀在暗處蠢蠢欲動,在死亡的四面包圍下,誰能全身而退?
A ver, es Sarah y siempre mola, pero este primer libro es bastante flojillo y la primera mitad se me hizo un pelín cuesta arriba
A good, fast-paced read, but not quite as good as Maas's later work; certainly feels the Y in YA. Can be read as a standalone but is probably better if you continue on to read the whole series (I assume).
To summarize it briefly: Celaena, a proficient assassin, has been in the salt mines for a year when she is taken out by Prince Dorian and his guard captain Chaol to be the prince's candidate in a competition to find the next King's Champion. But someone, or something, is picking off candidates even outside of the competitions designed to winnow out the unworthy. Celaena's heart is also pulled into two directions, between the overtly romantic Dorian and the steadfast Chaol.
The major drawback to the book is that it's so clearly written to be part of a series. For instance, from very early on, I started to suspect that Maas …
A good, fast-paced read, but not quite as good as Maas's later work; certainly feels the Y in YA. Can be read as a standalone but is probably better if you continue on to read the whole series (I assume).
To summarize it briefly: Celaena, a proficient assassin, has been in the salt mines for a year when she is taken out by Prince Dorian and his guard captain Chaol to be the prince's candidate in a competition to find the next King's Champion. But someone, or something, is picking off candidates even outside of the competitions designed to winnow out the unworthy. Celaena's heart is also pulled into two directions, between the overtly romantic Dorian and the steadfast Chaol.
The major drawback to the book is that it's so clearly written to be part of a series. For instance, from very early on, I started to suspect that Maas was pulling a Megan Whalen Turner and Celaena was more than she seemed. I think Maas was fairly clever about this, and if I hadn't read The Thief multiple times I might not have caught all of the clues. (And then later on there was a kind of stone maze and supernatural elements that also recall The Thief.) I had to check the description of later books in the series to confirm it, as it isn't resolved in this one, which was moderately frustrating. But on the opposite side, the love triangle appeared to be gearing up to be an even bigger part of a larger storyline - while Dorian is clearly the "winner" of the triangle through the book (I don't think it's much of a spoiler to say this) given his active romance with Celaena, Chaol's feelings for her were pretty much unresolved. But in checking Wikipedia to find out the other thing, I saw that this triangle is completely abandoned in favor of a totally different love interest who doesn't appear in the book! That was frustrating to find out, as I was getting pretty invested in the romantic tension (and I do not usually like love triangles much). I don't really understand why Maas did this and it retroactively make the book go down a lot in my estimation.
There is a strong female friendship, which I loved! Princess Nehemia is a kind of hostage at the court and she has her own secrets, but she is a genuine friend and equal of Celaena and I'm very interested in her as an individual and in her future plotline. The Strong Female Friendship thing often feels pasted in in a lot of books, but not here - it's organic and I love it.
The mystery plotline is ... I don't think it's something to pick up the book for. The person doing the killing is pretty obvious, although there is a twist at the end that was worth reading!