Violet’s breath catches. She’s never really thought of her heart before. The heart’s a muscle that works to keep her alive. Works to keep this other girl alive, too. Two muscles squeezing over and over to keep them upright, all for the purpose of this moment, right now.
They’re standing far away, but Violet can feel Liv’s hand on her own heart.
twelfth night modern retelling but olivia/viola endgame god this is everything i've ever wanted
that said. i do think this dragged a little in the middle and it ended up sitting on the backburner for a solid month (sorry 😭). short fun chapters to make you through it. i also think it would've benefitted from a little more closure but it was a good book overall, rec if you like messy protagonists in ya lol
the way this book keeps you engaged is that it always ends a section slyly referring to another event or incident which it then expands upon, which worked, but also made it feel like a very drawn-out dialogue. i was confused in the beginning but ishiguro did a good job at building up the details throughout so when the reveals came i wasn't surprised. overall, a little boring. didn't really love any of the characters and there wasn't the closure i wished for but well done.
i was going to be petty & write a terrible review for this after trctwt made me character of the day, but unfortunately it wasn't that bad so let's talk about it
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Wea-c7pRdlbdWf606eAUbe7K-HvQqhwTqRO_KfBRy5E/edit?tab=t.0 (google doc of this review, slightly edited)
spoilers ahead // tw abuse (canonical)
PLOT the first plot point to be introduced in this book is blue's whole 'if you kiss your true love he'll die' thing and this is kind of the most YA thing i've ever read (derogatory). her debating whether to tell gansey/adam was very shallowly written and every time it mentioned a kiss i cringed like a 12 year old who just discovered romance novels
the second & more important plot point was the raven boys (especially gansey, and later blue also) trying to find glendower. this also includes the reveals about noah being dead, killed by their latin teacher, and also his death being a sacrifice so gansey survived. unfortunately i completely lost out on all of this because halfway through the book i thought wait i forgot everything and looked him up. moment of silence pls
i think this was...okay. like not many developments happened honestly and this definitely felt like a first book of a series in that aspect. i'm interested in how it develops throughout the series, could go a few different ways.
PACING this was pretty fast-paced. or maybe it was just that it was split into 47 chapters, which is typical in YA and i didn't mind but did mess me up on the characters sometimes.
CHARACTERS many have been waiting for this.
i like blue. i like blue!! a lot!!! she's hard-working and loyal and sassy and her name is so beautiful. blue sargent...one thing about me is that i love A's in names and i love it when g is pronounced as j. blue is such a pretty word to say too. i love her.
honestly, for the first 30% or so of the books i couldn't differentiate the three boys (ronan, adam, & gansey), i think partially due to it being split into short chapters and constantly swapping povs. i mixed up their motivations and situations a lot and that didn't rly contribute to me liking them.
i read gansey as neurodivergent/autistic - he often says what he doesn't mean, has trouble with his emotions, and masks a lot. however he is still a pissy white boy so what now
i liked adam. god this review sounds so boring. abused children in fiction are so loved by me i rly sympathized with him and i honestly do not remember much about him so we should leave it at that.
ronan was an asshole in the beginning, thoguh to be fair they all were, but i was more endeared to him later on when i learned that he had 428 baby bunnies and went into debt for them. or whatever. (note: i just looked up specifics about his raven and got spoilered from the fandom page again you would think i am a complete idiot.) i will say that twitter shoots for him a lot and that's the most neutral thing i can think of
i would like to take a moment here to touch upon the repugnant scene. nasty work, dick gansey the third. in fact screw you. i understand that he was frustrated and does actually care for adam, not just wanting to own him, but also...still a terrible thing to say! i don't think the timing (around 93% into the book, and notably only a little after ronan directly intervened in adam's abuse) did him a lot of favors.
i am looking up side character lists now. we should just bullet point this
declan. who is this is this just the asshole brother
noah. i liked noah. he was okay.
barrington whelk idgaf
neeve. ?
maura and persephone and calla. honestly they also blended together a bit so i have nothing to say
do you notice what all these characters i just named have in common. don't guess i'm just gonna say it
OTHER diversity they're all fucking white lmao
i personally read blue as a woc and i've been told maggie stiefvater said retroactively she should have been written as one, but canonically that means she's white and wow this actually goes for every single character! there is not a single character specified to be non-white throughout this entire book as far as i remember. let me know if i'm wrong tho.
there are gay people tho listen to this. what in the faggotry.
As Adam stared at his lap, penitent, he mused that there was something musical about Ronan when he swore, a careful and loving precision to the way he fit the words together, a black-painted poetry. It was far less hateful sounding than when he didn’t swear.
i just crashed out
romance i should've made this its own category but i almost forgot it was there...i know endgame is blue/gansey (i just force-feminized the latter btw they are both girls <33) and there were a few moments. not much because i know it builds up over the trilogy but definitely not the focus.
and thank god for that bc i am exactly the sort of annoying gay person to say 'ew' out loud whenever a girl and a boy have a touching moment together
blue/adam feels wrong.
CONCLUSION this felt very much like the typical first book in a series - laying the foundation, a bit mediocre, just engaging enough that i want to read the second. i have been thinking about their dynamics a lot today and i understand why some of y'all go crazy over this.
also GIDEON NAV REFERENCEEEE
“Keep poking things with your stick and it’ll be okay.”
“My stick! All week we’ve been walking in the woods! That seems awfully —”
“Cavalier?” Gansey suggested.
i have many great annotations in my books app on this i just can't fit all of them there. gansey scratching the back of his head with a credit card was lowkey the funniest thing ever
that's all thank you for reading i should start a blog
plot was meh but it raised some interesting questions. fleshed out the characters a lot more than aart through changing povs. adored miranda and maya's povs. i am too woke for andy.
this was cool, i was engaged the whole way and i don't rly think it dulled at any point. april's pov was a bit weirdly written at some points but those were easily ignored
okay this was so cute. i am on a lesbians in space kick and this was so lovely and a pleasure to read. there's some plot, some romance (which is more in the second half), some mystery and an ominous pov for a while. so. read it. and thank me
i've seen people complaining about not enough explanation being given to the worldbuilding but honestly i thought it was quite good :) at least i understood most of what was going on. kai, ziede & tahren are close to my heart and the mixing of the two timelines was nice (i did get confused at some points, which might've been intended lol)
thinking it's appropriate to blurb this with 'comfort woman' considering that this is a fucking space opera and the character in question has blond hair and blue eyes is certainly a Choice! call me sensitive but with the historical basis of that term, japan's continued attempts to erase that and other atrocities from that time period from its history, and the love interest literally being japanese (though one of the 'good' ones, and her heritage isn't expanded upon) it's really just insane levels of audacity
besides that. it suffered from a lot of typical first person YA issues, especially with the pov switches - i ended up not interested in either of the narratives and it sounded very impersonal at times.
this was okay, overall. it really fluctuated in certain departments (pacing, quality of writing, character work) but i liked sylah & found the tournament plot engaging.