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I went into this book swapping out the Furies for the Fates and was moderately confused for most of it, but once I flipped them in my mind, everything clicked.

This book is influenced by multiple mythologies, including Greek (with the Furies being a very core theme). I enjoy that Mark Lawrence made Rue an older age (60+) and it isn't something that's swept under the rug, it is a very common theme that is routinely brought up and is part of her character.

This book is brutal, unforgiving, and dark. The ending sets up for the next two books beautifully. This was my first Mark Lawrence book and I can't wait to get back into his older material.

The prose itself isn't something that I think stands out, particularly, but it does what it needs to do to get the grittiness of the story across.

The Academy graduated three students a year, three Kindly Ones, supposedly incarnations of the trio whose name you did not speak.
“Welcome to the Academy of Kindness.”
“Sometimes fate delivers a better choice than anything we can come up with ourselves.”
Youth, it seemed, was a drug she had forgotten during the course of its slow weaning.

I want to start off by saying that this was the first time I've ever conciously noted the prose of a book. The way the author used such flowery descriptive language was captivating.

Her voice was a lazy curl of smoke, a rich woman’s voice, beautiful and thoroughly obnoxious.

The emotional journey that the two FMC's go through is one that is of two-parts. Each individual has their own grief and trauma to go through by themselves and also together. A very central theme of this is tackling what it means to decide your own fate versus what's "decided" for you. I'm a very big fan of found family scenarios and a secondary enemies to lovers plotline.

Her Galath, Elayne’s Galath, finally knew love and family. He knew it with her only family: Hari, her brother of choice, the only person she’d let stay close; and Vina, her Vina.

Overall, this book was very sweet. I loved the way it was written. If you want a fantasy written in the UK featuring a diverse cast, I would highly recommend The Isle in the Sea.

Oh my GOD. I think the ending of this tops Hero of Ages for me, personally. There are so many cool implications for the wider Cosmere. Some familiar faces. An absolute gut punch of a finale. 

The proper sequel to Legends & Lattes. Proper cozy takes a back seat compared to the initial novel but in a very gratifying way. Grief, finding yourself and who you are, unlikely friendships. All of it is included. Phenomenal addition to the world of Legends & Lattes. 

Man. It???s Dandadan. There is no explanation needed. 

Thomas and Andrew. That's all I can say. The imagery CG Drews invokes with the specific words used is incredible.

This was such a nice read. It wasn???t anything too complicated, some pretty common tropes played out. The romance was nice and the action was great (and downright brutal at times). I know there???s a confirmed sequel but I???m not sure it???s really needed. 

It expands and improves on Red Rising in every measurable way. Any issue I had previously is well and truly gone. The highs are high and the lows are??? abysmal. 

The Princess Diaries written by Brandon Sanderson. This is such a good whimsical story. Hoid is fantastic. I don???t recommend it as an entry to the Cosmere but I do recommend it if you???re familiar with the Cosmere already.

The first chapter took some getting used to but after that? It just didn???t stop. The book explores grief and identity and feminine rage against what society expects of you. I love the individual character arcs and what Brom is able to accomplish with a book as short as this is. 

Toxic relationships. Grief. Power struggles. Loss of identity. This book contains it all. It???s not by any means perfect but I enjoyed every minute of it. 

I love the relationship between Annalise and Brinley, I???ll be sad to see it gone. I do have a few issues with the continuity within this story itself. It feels like things were said without any regard to what they mean. 

For what it is, I enjoyed this a lot. It was fairly predictable but enjoyable nonetheless. 

I get why people may not like this one as much, coming right off the heels of Oathbringer, but this is a strong contender for top 2. I really enjoyed this and I really enjoyed the science behind everything.