Elizabeth Kirke
Auteur de Semester Aboard (More than Magic, #1)
A propos de l'auteur
Séries
Œuvres de Elizabeth Kirke
The More than Magic Series 1 exemplaire
Racing Time (Saint's Grove #4) 1 exemplaire
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Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 14
- Membres
- 89
- Popularité
- #207,492
- Évaluation
- 4.6
- Critiques
- 7
- ISBN
- 11
While a few aspects of the introduction are quite refreshing and original, the book is mostly assembled from overused YA tropes. The worst offender is a bunch of teenagers who all speak dozens of languages and have mastered all the martial arts in the world etc. But at the same time, they are still just teenagers with all the inexperience, rashness, and stupidity that you might expect. It's a very jarring and unbelievable contrast.
This is followed by the MC being introduced and taken into the fold including deep mutual trust with them all within days.
If you have read a bit of YA urban fantasy before you probably recognize a lot of this already.
Later on, when the story gets to actually tense and dangerous situations the entire cast can't stop making stupid mistakes. Most of them are minor but they are all clearly and very obviously only plot devices to set up the drama that follows.
On one hand, I want to cry TSTL but on the other, they are teenagers which are completely out of their depths so they deserve a bit of clemency.
But the cherry on top, and that is what really got on my nerves, is how afterward the characters talk about perfectly reasonable actions like they were stupid mistakes and blame themselves. They can't stop talking about all the things they could've done differently. All the while nobody even mentions any of the actual plot-device stupidity. The book is only willing to acknowledge understandable mistakes but sweeps the actual bs stupidity under the rug.
This leads to this incredibly jarring disconnect between what the characters claim happened and what I as the reader actually read. It feels almost like gaslighting.
Just why?
It only gets worse from there. Unnecessary melodrama until the end. Everyone tells the MC how special, capable, and unusual she is despite her being anything but.… (plus d'informations)