Ratings163
Average rating4.6
where do i start? where the fuck do i begin?
i'm so so happy that i found this series, because what would i have done without it. i feel like my mind, my life, my heart was empty before i read this and now i feel full, i feel complete, i feel whole again.
this saga broke me, patched me up and tore me apart all over again. i dont think i am ever going to find any other series similar to this, any other characters that will come close to the ones i've come to love and adore in this, or have similar story to what this saga had. to that one person who brought the name of the first book on my feed on twt thank you
5/5. in fact 10/5.
if there is one fantasy series i would get physical copies of and reread again and again, it would be this.
The feeling of finishing this book can only be described as identical with that first clear deep breath of air you take after a sustained emotional breakdown. It's that cool relief and hope still tinged with bitter grief.Fonda Lee has tone in her bag. Have you ever read a book that just stressed you out so thoroughly but kept you coming back? That was every single book in this trilogy for me. From violent and bloody battles to the Sisyphean corporate meetings, how does an author manage to sustain a taut string of high tension for over nearly 2000 pages, I'll never know. And how she comes up with such gorgeous rich and varied characters, a whole WORLD of them, I can never wrap my head around.The meticulous detail she put into this entire series makes me wonder if she had a dedicated wall adorned with pins and string portioned off just to keep track of every character, every location, and every detail she has breathed to life. If ever there was a master of setup and payoff, it would be her. (Additionally and slightly aside, I feel like this is the only series I've ever read whose sex scenes actually add to the storytelling and weren't just spicy fan service.) This book in particular hit so many marks for me as a working 26 year old. I watched Hilo, Shae, and Anden grow from clueless kids roughly my age at the time I started reading to fully established and competent adults. I watched them grow families in what felt like the blink of an eye. I felt their struggles, I felt their worries, and I felt seen. I remain viciously proud of how far they've come and can only hope I can find my own clarity like they did theirs. Thank you [a:Fonda Lee 7705004 Fonda Lee https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1428795279p2/7705004.jpg] for such a fitting, tragic, and beautiful end (that final scene was GORGEOUS), to a series I'm not afraid to call the best I've ever read.
It has been a while since a book has been able to make me feel a range of emotions.
TITLE Jade Legacy
AUTHOR Fonda Lee
Genre Fantasy
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Emotional Impact 8.25
Characters 9.5
Plot 8.75
Worldbuilding / Magic System 8.75
Dialogue / Prose 8.25
Official Rating 8.70
Goodreads Rating 5
Date Started 1/26/2024
Date Finished 2/2/2024
NOTES Pretty great ending to a great series, the scope is expanded even more than last book, and this time the timeframe of the series stretches across an entire lifespan which I loved, I thought it was so unique. The story is less about a single Kaul and more focused on the family and it's legacy
3.5 stars
such a great ending. It was so fulfilling emotional and rewarding. The themes of family defining our identities and growing with us will stick with me for a while.
I think overall the series had such strong characters and strong arcs. But i think the politics and the worldbuilding kind of held the series back. All the locations that we visited in the series were so wonderfully built but there were so many more we barely touched and only heard about through politicking that it made me so much less invested in those sections.
Also while the character arcs were so rewarding, it felt like there was so much telling of the characters rather than showing. The transition from the first book's action packed gangster/clan warfare to a more strategic story that carried the same values and characters was really elegant but it led to some weaker development especially when we skipped around in time so much.
Perfect. Loved it. Did everything I wanted to. The weight this series carries and how well Fonda Lee weaves her story arcs and characters is fantastic and top tier.
Jade Legacy is the final book in the Greenbone Saga by Fonda Lee. The previous two books have been absolutely stellar, with Jade War blowing the original out of the water, shocking everybody by not only dodging middle book syndrome, but surpassing the original book. So Jade Legacy had a lot to live up to, the pressure mounting with every day that passed. And I'm pleased to say that, not only did Fonda stick the landing, she once again surpassed the previous book.
Jade Legacy delivers on the promises of the series in ways that are both expected, and come out of left field. No character's conclusion feels wrong for them, each of them making it to a point that makes perfect sense, even when if it wasn't necessarily what I expected for them.
A big part of that in my opinion is the books really interesting structure. The previous books took place over the course of a year or two, whereas this one takes place over 20, with 4 major timeskips in it. I knew about this going, and was really dubious, since I haven't seen a lot of stories pull that off particularly well, but I can't see any other way for the story to have been told.
Due to this structure, this book is DENSE. Almost every chapter has some hard hitting moment, where a major event unfolds, or a character has everything come tumbling down around them. This should, by all rights, feel like there's just too much going on, but for some reason, I never felt like it was.
I think it has something to do with how the book is structured, since the time jumps, both big and small allow you to have a degree of separation from these events, whereas when you don't get the time jumps, such as with the bombs early on, the scenes feel much more intense, forcing you to deal with the event as it happens, instead of getting a play by play of the events after the fact.
Lee also continues to show her ability to deal with difficult issues with tact and grace in this book, and it's so good. She deals with disability, being a failure, turning into your parents, being scared of not living up to what came before and having your idyllic view of your parents shattered.
I was particularly impressed by how she handled Wen's recovery from her disability that she received at the end of Jade War. Wen was a character who I definitely enjoyed in previous entries, but Legacy elevated her to a whole new level for me, placing her firmly in my top 5 characters.
The world of the book has expanded massively, to the point where we now see every major country that's been mentioned in the past, and the effects of Jade on them all. Shotar in particular was one that I wasn't expecting to show up in the book, but I'm glad it did, since it definitely had the most interesting vibe out of all of them, especially considering the history that it shares with the main characters.
Lee still handles death in an expert way, rarely having it be this Hollywood-esque thing, where last words get exchanged, and one liners are shot out at the speed of light. Instead, death is a generally very quick and dirty affair, that has to be brushed past in the moment because of the dire stakes of the moment. None of them really hit the same as Lan's in the first book, but that's likely because of just how different his death was to traditional fantasy death.
Seeing how the culture of Janloon evolves was another highlight of the book. The Green Bone culture has just gotten more and more enticing as the series goes, being this neat amalgamation of Samurai honour codes, and Yakuza street rules. Watching that chafe against an ever expanding world is such a fascinating time, especially when you see how foreign Green Bones treat their culture, and doubly so when you see how foreigners use Jade as a tool, instead of a status symbol
Fonda's prose is as usual, pretty good, but nothing all that special. She doesn't really have any stylistic hallmarks, she just writes an engaging world that's rich with descriptions, and has tight dialogue. It's not quite as basic as early Sanderson, but it's certainly no Rothfuss either. It fits in a nice little spot where it just does the job really well.
Where her writing shines is in the distinctiveness of each PoVs voice. If Lee didn't tell you who's head you were in, you would likely still be able to work out, since each character has subtle differences to them that allow you to get a real feel for them, and even allows you to see inside their head when they aren't the PoV character, because you just know how they're going to react to the things that are going on around them.
All in all, I cannot recommend this book enough if you have any positive feelings towards the rest of the series. It sticks the landing in spectacular fashion, in a manner few veteran writers can manage, let alone a debut author. This was an absolute tome of a novel, that was such a page turner, I read it faster than most novellas. I'll be purchasing every Fonda Lee novel day one in the future.
One of the most tense books I've read in a long time. I don't think I can appreciate all the chess pieces Lee laid down. I certainly missed some amongst what felt like many arcs both old and new - I mean, just wow - but this was an epic book with an absolutely epic conclusion that did not disappoint.
"We don't handle this world. We make it handle us."
This is a perfect story to me. There was a point during the previous book where the scope of this story started to worry me with how big things were getting. However, Fonda Lee not only squashed those worries but she knocked this out of the park. I don't think I could've asked for an ending better than this.
The clan is my blood, and the Pillar is its master. On my honor, my life, and my jade.
I will, one day, process and finally articulate all the thoughts and emotions I have for this book, and talk to a therapist, and then send the therapy bill to Fonda Lee..