
The Winter of the Witch
Winternight Trilogy, Book 3
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Narrado por:
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Kathleen Gati
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De:
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Katherine Arden
Random House presents the audiobook edition of The Winter of the Witch by Katherine Arden, read by Kathleen Gati.
One girl can make a difference...
Moscow is in flames, leaving its people searching for answers – and someone to blame. Vasilisa, a girl with extraordinary gifts, must flee for her life, pursued by those who blame their misfortune on her magic.
Then a vengeful demon returns, stronger than ever. Determined to engulf the world in chaos, he finds allies among men and spirits. Mankind and magical creatures alike find their fates resting on Vasya's shoulders.
But she may not be able to save them all.
©2019 Katherine Arden (P)2019 Penguin Random House LLCListeners also enjoyed...




















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simply amazing
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The best narration and great story.
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Interesting
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The whole trilogy made for a wonderful reading experience.
It's a very masterfully done fairytale, the characters are complex and the story is inspiring, empowering and so rich in life lessons.
I would give this trilogy 10 stars if I could.
Beautiful book, beautiful audiobook
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I have no words to describe this one!
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The Winter of the Witch starts right where The Girl in the Tower ends. But this book is darker than all the others, in more ways than one.
There’s fire and tears and pain. Wounds and blood and scars. Healing. Love. Betrayal. Faith. Midnight and Midday. Loyalties, both forced and freely given. New friends, old enemies and fragile alliances. Family. War. Chyerti. Death and life. And of course, horses.
There was not one character that I did not like. I understood Konstatin, respected Dimitri, shrugged my shoulders at Miedved. Got frustrated with Morozko, rolled my eyes at Vasya. But I rooted for them still, and laughed and cried with them.
Stories that I thought were done and dusted in the previous books were revisited in a different light, giving them more depth and us more insight. Strings that I did not even know existed were connected, and then nicely tied off towards the end.
Yes, it is darker. People are more cruel (even Vasya). There are walking dead. There are dark forest roads at midnight. There is war. (Not the best delivery of a battle, I must say. A bit disappointed at that.)
But it is always darkest before the light breaks. This story of stories’ ending was satisfying, despite the tears.
Kathleen Gati reverted to book one’s slow lulling narration in between characters again. That’s mostly why it took me a long time to finish this.
Did I like it? Yes. Did the story need to be split into three books? I think so. Will I read it again? Maybe. But listen? Probably not.
Edit:
I also love the author's note at the end - there really WAS a prince named Dmitry Ivanovich who led his armies in the battle of Kulikovo, and a monk named Alexander Peresvet was his champion. This is exactly what this trilogy is about: the amalgamation of history and fantasy, religion and tradition, Christianity and paganism. Worth the time.
A fitting fairytale ending
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