Ratings4
Average rating3.5
Seventeen-year-old Leslie wants a tattoo as a way of reclaiming control of herself and her body, but the eerie image she selects pulls her into the dangerous Dark Court of the faeries, where she draws on inner strength to make a horrible choice.
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Melissa Marr writes dark. Drugs, suicide, murder, sex, lies, rape, nothing is hidden in the Wicked Lovely books.
At first I was disappointed to find that Aislinn, Seth, Keenan & Donia weren't the main characters. In fact, we never even see Donia here. She's just mentioned off-page! But as I got to know Leslie it was okay. Just like Aislinn, Leslie is a rich and powerful character. She's strong without denying her fears & weaknesses. She's no idiot, she's proud and determined to make things better for herself by herself.
She continuously surprised me with her actions. She's not some namby-pamby female lead. She was great.
Melissa Marr writes the dark fae well. It's madness and addiction and fear, but she writes it drenched in reality. It reminds me a little of Holly Blacks fae except where Marr is trying to portray a darker side to teenage life, Black just writes the dark to shock the reader, to be faux-edgy.
Marr ends Ink Exchange with a bit of a cliff hanger. Kind of like what she did with Wicked Lovely. Things were resolved, in a sense, but we were looking forward to the aftermath. I wonder if she'll deliver that in the next book.