Ratings15
Average rating4.1
Tea's life, and the fate of the kingdoms, hang in the balance as the Dark grows in her day by day.
Featured Series
3 primary booksThe Bone Witch is a 3-book series with 3 primary works first released in 2017 with contributions by Rin Chupeco.
Reviews with the most likes.
I wish I had the first two books in front of me to refer back to while reading this one. Specifically, the last few chapters of book two. Like the first two books, this one alternates chapters between the bard's point of view, and the story told to the bard by Tea. The difference is that they have separated paths at this point; so instead of the bard's chapters being very short, getting clarification on the story she's telling, he's now telling what's happening to him in present day, interspersed with Tea's letters that he's carrying, with the rest of her story. This gets VERY confusing. It's confusing even trying to explain the timeline! Okay, if we split up all three books between Tea's story and the Bard's viewpoint, chronologically they'd look like this:
The Bone Witch - Tea's Story
The Heartforger - Tea's Story
The Shadowglass - Tea's Story
The Bone Witch - Bard's Viewpoint
The Heartforger - Bard's Viewpoint
The Shadowglass - Bard's Viewpoint
See why I'd like to have the other two books to refer back to? This book is giving me part 3 and part 6. And while it was pretty easy to keep them straight in books one and two, because the Bard wasn't doing much besides having a conversation with Tea, in this book, he's off seeing OTHER important events that are happening while Tea is doing other things - and occasionally flitting in and out of his orbit too!
It is a good conclusion - the end, especially, had me crying into my book - but most of the book was very, VERY confusing. Like another conclusion I've read recently, if you moved straight through the trilogy with no waiting time, it might not be too bad.
What ESPECIALLY annoys me, is in the Bard's viewpoint in the first two books, she does something that is supposed to be impossible. So in her story in The Shadowglass, this thing is impossible. But in the Bard's viewpoint, she's ALREADY DONE IT. And there's no explanation of HOW. That's really what I'd like to refer back to the other two books about. Having that particular task be in the time gap between the two parts of the book was poorly done. Like, really? I read Book 2 almost a YEAR AGO. I don't remember how that part happened.
So that's particularly frustrating. I wish Book 3 had condensed to one timeline. I don't really see why it couldn't have. It would have been much less confusing!
You can find all my reviews and more at Goddess in the Stacks.
In the final book in the trilogy I was more interested in the characters and the world than I was in the plot which is normal with me, but in the case with this book I just felt like the story dragged and I was rushing through it to finish the book. I am satisfied with the ending.
Wow! Tea in the past and Tea in the present slowly come together to be the same person. I had no clue how she became such a different person, but as it turned out she didn't change that much, which really made for an amazing story arc. There is still plenty about this world for me to understand, so I will be rereading this series sometime. The very end of this book was a little too much, but that is a very minor complaint over an entire trilogy!