
A Court of Wings and Ruin
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Narrado por:
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Amanda Leigh Cobb
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De:
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Sarah J. Maas
The epic series from #1 bestselling global phenomenon author Sarah J. Maas continues with a stunning story of love, war, and revenge.
Feyre has returned to the Spring Court, determined to gather information on Tamlin’s actions and learn what she can about the invading king threatening to bring her land to its knees. But to do so she must play a deadly game of deceit.
One slip could bring doom not only for Feyre but for everything—and everyone she holds dear.
As war bears down upon them all, Feyre endeavors to take her place as one of the High Fae of the land, balancing her struggle to master her powers—both magical and political—and her love for her court and family. Amidst these struggles, Feyre and Rhysand must
decide whom to trust among the cunning and lethal High Lords, and hunt for allies in unexpected places.
In this thrilling third book in the Court of Thorns and Roses series, the fate of Feyre’s world is at stake as armies grapple for power over the one thing that could destroy it.
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Loved it, despite new narrator (give her a chance)
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And since this book is over 25 hours long, how were people writing reviews THE FIRST DAY IT CAME OUT!? I don't think half those people even gave the new narrator a chance. They couldn't have had the time to listen to it. So. I admit, it took a while for her to find her stride, I think, but once I got past my initial shock and dismay, and I started listening to the story itself? I was still interested, and I was still moved.
Chapter 44 - with all the high lords? And that scene with the cliff? Oh - and Lord Grayson scene with Elaine???? Come on. It was good. Admit it. Of course, you have to listen that far.
It probably sucks to step into such a popular series, so I say job well done -- even if I wish Jennifer was still doing it....
Not that bad!!
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Narrator Change Didn't Ruin It
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As for the story itself, I found it to be a good conclusion to the trilogy—and even better, I feel Ms. Maas did a wonderful job of leaving little things and trails of potential plot lines for future books in this world. Personally, I really enjoyed the fact that not all the minor storylines were tied up like perfect little bows—not only does it lend a good sense of realism, but it also opens the doors to other books, whether they’re standalone novellas about certain characters or an extension series building off this one. It’s a brilliant move by a strong author.
Thanks for a great series, Sarah J. Maas. And Amanda Leigh Cobb: ignore the haters; you did a wonderful job.
Lovely conclusion
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could not stop listening
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The second narrator did not. At least not for me.
Not the original narrator...disappointed!!
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Whyyyyyyyyyyyy did you change the narrator 🙄🤦🏾♀️
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amazing book.
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Would you listen to A Court of Wings and Ruin again? Why?
I would, under the right circumstances..Any additional comments?
The narrator is just fine. After listening for a few hours I adjusted to her voice and didn't mind the slight differences. A lot of the voices are quite similar, and I didn't mind where they were changed. I think it takes a fair bit of skill to mimic a previous narrator's voices as well as Cobb did.I have no idea if there will be other books in this series or other books outside of the series written in this world, but I'm not sure I can emotionally take any more of Rhys' willing suffering and sacrifice. People like that deserve a break and some time to just be happy and whole (centuries of it, in his case). And frankly, Rhys is clearly the type of person to risk it all, or sacrifice it all because he thinks it's the right thing to do in that moment to help or save others. Any other book with Rhys in it will be just as painful to listen to.
SPOILER-ish (tried to make it vague):
This is actually a criticism I have of the book-- Rhys' behavior *especially* near the end. No single person could be placed in so many situations where they have to give up more and more in service to others and remain as Rhys has. That level & extent of loss & suffering changes people in negative ways. No single person could survive 500 years of intermittent, but regular, misery, suffering, sacrifice, and loss, and then be willing to give up all that remains in a brief moment when that's the easiest and simplest solution to a problem that is described in merely two or three sentences, and doesn't sound like an imminent threat, but one that could be explored for 10 or so minutes, so a better, less self-sacrificing plan could be tried.
It made me simultaneously angry with the character and devastated. Five centuries of life apparently never taught Rhys patience and thoughtfulness in the face of a dilemma when his own ability to sacrifice could quickly solve the problem. What makes me so angry is that he now has someone else to think of, who he's supposed to be so bonded with it transcends other romantic relationships, and he *still* willingly sacrifices everything without discussing it with her. He made a decision to sacrifice, without adequately thinking about how it impacted *her*. He shirked that responsibility. I quite honestly can't square it --what he did, that choice he made unilaterally.
That is a terminal character flaw. One that makes me fear for the main character Feyre, because a man like that isn't long for the world. That decision turned him -- in my view-- from a good & noble leader willing to do what it takes to save & protect his people -- to a martyr. Fayre deserves better than a guy with a death wish. Maybe that's, in fact, the change that five centuries of Rhys' mostly miserable life wrought in him. If that's the case, any further books about that character would be even less pleasant than this one.
/SPOILER
Decent series of books. The first was cringe-worthy at times but the series straightened out by the second in my mind, and this 3rd book was finally classified correctly. This is adult romance-fantasy, not for tweens.
The narrator is just fine!
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Just as beautiful as the others
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