A Poison Dark and Drowning

A Poison Dark and Drowning

2017 • 434 pages

Ratings5

Average rating3.8

15

Some spoilers within, though nothing that would give away the “plot”.

This one was a little more eye roll inducing than the first one. Henrietta expresses little to no character development and is very much a product of the era the book is set (late 1800s London) even though it's a fully fictional world full of magic and faeries and giant otherworld monsters. Some of her decisions and inner thoughts/turmoil were overly dramatic and I found Maria and other characters much more realistic and interesting. I enjoy Cluess' writing overall and it was a book I looked forward to reading based on the first of the series, but the writer could have done a little more work on her main character to make them progress instead of stagnate. I was actually hoping they would die at the end I was so fed up with them. There is also virtually no ending to the story, fully written to accommodate a third book, which is one of my biggest pet peeves. They don't even enter Blackwood's mansion at Sorrow-Fell which would then lead to them meeting R'hlem and possible destroying him, with Magnus riding off for no other reason than to be killed. But we don't know because they're just sitting on the front lawn staring at the house when the book ends. If you can't finish the arc in a single book, don't bother with it.

October 5, 2017Report this review