Ratings16
Average rating4.3
The thrilling finale to the New York Times bestselling Young Elites series from “hit factory” Marie Lu There was once a time when darkness shrouded the world, and the darkness had a queen. Adelina Amouteru is done suffering. She’s turned her back on those who have betrayed her and achieved the ultimate revenge: victory. Her reign as the White Wolf has been a triumphant one, but with each conquest her cruelty only grows. The darkness within her has begun to spiral out of control, threatening to destroy all she's gained. When a new danger appears, Adelina’s forced to revisit old wounds, putting not only herself at risk, but every Elite. In order to preserve her empire, Adelina and her Roses must join the Daggers on a perilous quest—though this uneasy alliance may prove to be the real danger. #1 New York Times bestselling author Marie Lu concludes Adelina's story with this haunting and hypnotizing final installment to the Young Elites series.
Featured Series
3 primary books4 released booksThe Young Elites is a 4-book series with 3 primary works first released in 2014 with contributions by Marie Lu and Prisca Primasari.
Reviews with the most likes.
When she appears on the other side of the world, I will be there, and when she returns here, so will I.
Original de: El Blog del Gato - El Extraño Gato del Cuento
Qué cerebro. Esta es la clase de libro que te hace dar cuenta que no podrás ni en tus más grandes ambiciones, escribir. Tiene un mundo bien construido, unos personajes bien desarrollados y romance con el drama justo para mantener tu corazón shipper doliendo. The Midnight Star para mí ha tenido un final satisfactoria aunque doloroso. Es cruel, pero estético, pone a prueba tu imaginación, pero con escenarios sencillos de imaginar, no te hace sentir fuera de lugar con lo que pintas en tu cabeza.
Twitter • Blog • Pinterest • Tumblr • Instagram • Facebook • Tvtime
Inital Thoughts: Despite its obvious flaws, especially when compared to the other books in the trilogy, the Midnight Star is beautiful in its simplicity and execution. Adelina has to be one of my favorite characters in a while.
Previous ratings in series:
1. The Young Elites: 6/10
2. The Rose Society: 8/10
Rating Breakdown:
Writing: 8.5/10
Enjoyment: 6.5/10
Pacing: 6.5/10
Characters, development and world-building: 9.5/10
Plot: 7/10
Creativity: 7/10
Overall: 8/10
Wow. I do have to say that this ending completely threw me, like much of this trilogy did. It was another completely uncharacteristic flash of brilliance in what I thought was a series of mediocrity taking itself too seriously, outside of these few brief moments of pure ingenuity.
So we enter this book around 6 months after the end of the previous installment, where our favorite innocent little elite, Adelina had successfully completed her goal of becoming pernicious queen bitch extraordinaire (any future dictators who want to make use of that title must pay royalty fees to me btw) in order to payback the unmarked and the world. She is also now schizophrenic (even if those voices in her head actually exist because her mental state is partly a result of the degrading of the elites' powers), paranoid and increasingly insane. She also is increasingly not in full control of herself. Ironically, her quest for outward strength and power leads her to lose her internal strength and control.
Adelina is a perfectly constructed character. First introduced as naïve, then twisted by fate, those around her, herself and her powers into a beautifully hateful and despicable character that we all are cheering for in some deranged way. This horrifyingly likable, yet utterly terrible character is alluring. Teren also receives a similar sort of treatment to his character, although in a different enough and lesser way as to feel different. I would disagree with anyone who claims his character arc did not reach a satisfying end.
Lu manages to break my heart with the small things, whilst making massacres feel apathetic. The ending left a shiver in me as it played perfectly with my heart. I felt emotion, yet the book didn't rely on shockingly horrifying me to produce it.
So, the ending was great. The trip there had its failures and successes though. This book felt a lot more flat that is predecessors, particularly The Rose Society. Dull enough to make me not sneak glances at it in class in sections (this is a usually practice for me). The book felt short yet managed to also feel dull at the same time. I finished within only a few hours due to its short length at 316 pages. Not much went on plot wise except the finale and its buildup. This book was far more an exploration of Adelina (and side characters, although we received far too few chapters from other PoVs for this to really happen), then a telling of an exciting story. And despite praising its handling of aforementioned topic, a lack of plot also results in a lack of opportunity to attack Adelina's psyche.
Anyway, this book is short, so it is still quite enjoyable despite being more flat and lacking in plot. Definitely worth a read.
muh blog
I love how dark the story gets with each book and you can already dread the end of the story while reading. I finished this book with one question on my mind, why am I so sympathetic toward the villains? I'm not just talking about Adelina.