

Heir of Fire: 3 (Throne of Glass, 3) : Maas, Sarah J.: desertcart.in: Books Review: Absolutely brilliant! - This month, I started a reread of the series to prepare for the upcoming and highly anticipated release of Kingdom of Ash, the conclusion to Aelinâs (Celaenaâs) story. At one point during my initial read of Throne of Glass, I was contemplating giving up on the series, and might not have picked up Heir of Fire at all. After reading ToG and CoM, I didnât understand what all the fuss was about, since this series was a favourite of so many people I knew. Honestly, I didnât like them that much at all the first time I read them. The writing was poor, especially the excessive use of exclamation marks which made me pause and cringe every time I came across it. The overused addressing of Celaena as âthe Assassinâ or Dorian as âthe Princeâ and Chaol as âthe Captainâ too was terrible, as if shoving their titles in my face repeatedly would make them seem more important and powerful. It just ended up annoyed me. And I didnât feel particularly connected to any of the characters (I did love Celaena though) or invested in the story. But I gave this series one last chance to redeem itself, and it did not disappoint. Heir of Fire pulled me in like none of the other books had, and carved itself a special place in my heart. From here onward, the Throne of Glass series too a major turn, a turn that set it on the course of becoming one of my favourite seriesâ. It was the book that made you either more interested and invested in the story, or hate it with all your heart. There is no in-between. Iâve read reviews that call it slow or boring or downright awful, stating that the series took a wrong turn and went in a direction that completely veered off from what it started out as. Fortunately, it was just what I needed. Heir of Fire is the story of Celaena Sardothian on her journey to becoming Aelin Ashryver Galathynius. Itâs Celaena healing from her past, from all the atrocities sheâs witnessed, from believing shes worthless, from what she was forced to endure. Itâs her coming back, from that edge she was about to tip over, when Nehemia says âdonât let the light go outâ. Celaena and Aelin are two distinctly different people. And her transformation is one of the best written Iâve ever encountered. Itâs so realistic and portrays her struggles in such a way that you are stunned by the depth of what you have read. She has to accept herself and forgive herself for her past. She has to shoulder her responsibility. She has to claim her birthright. "She was Aelin Ashryver Galathynius, and she would not be afraid" Rereads add something to the story that is lost the first time. Maybe you just pay more attention, maybe the details stick in your mind betterâĶ But the feelings invoked are stronger, and you appreciate the story more. Iâm still in awe over how Aelinâs journey was handled, and I donât think that was too important to me the first time I read it. Heaps of information Iâd forgotten were brought back, which is not particularly important or integral to the story but what I find rather interesting such as the crossing the witches made from the wastes across the White Fang mountains and Ruhnns after magic disappeared. The loss of magic meant their brooms didnât work anymore and they started to age again, so they couldnât survive in the wastes. I loved these little details that added so much depth to the story, as it built up the world beautifully. Another thing that was amazing was Aelinâs and Rowanâs friendship. It does develop into a romantic relationship I know, but it was just so pure and refreshing here. Both of them, broken and scarred people, finding happiness again by helping each otherâĶ And Iâm glad that itâs not that insta-love rubbish, because nothing, nothing, puts me off more. True love after you just meet a person? *scoffs* This is how itâs supposed to be. Respect and friendship. It seems perfectly reasonable that they should fall in love in the near future, after truly knowing each other. Rowan is the most stubborn, arrogant and prideful idiot in the whole of Erilea, and I love him to bits. I donât think anyone else could have helped bring Aelin back as well as he did, especially because he is probably the only person who went through something that was somewhat similar (though not even close to what Aelin did). He understood her, and gave her just the amount of space she needed, but also knew when to step in and help. They make such a good team, honestly. Under all the âI donât care about anyone, and I donât need any friendsâ attitude, heâs an actual cinnamon roll who desperately wants to be understood. Heâs also the most responsible and level-headed person Aelin knows, so itâs probably a good thing theyâre a team as heâll balance Aelin out nicely. Parallel stories are another thing that made the plot more interesting and intricate. We have Aelinâs healing arc, Dorianâs magic and Sorscha arc, Aedion and Chaolâs rebellion arc, and finally Manonâs introduction arc. Aedion. AEDION. AEDION. I think I may be just melting into a puddle by just thinking about him. Iâm so glad to finally have him back in the story! Heâs the sweetest, most brilliant and kindest people ever. And my heart breaks for him every time he thinks heâs not worthy of serving Aelin, or that he would do anything to see her one last time. These two are goals I swear. Aelin and Aedion could do anything together, burn the world down for all I care, and Iâd be crying with pride seeing my beautiful, stabby children together. Cause thatâs all they want. To be together again. I AM CRYING NOW. *sobs* Manonâs story was WONDERFUL. Because, dear god, I love that witch. She is cold, brutal and gloriously, fiercely wicked. Tell me why Iâd ever want anything else. Sarah J Maas could write about how Manon brushed her teeth and I would pay every cent I had to read it. Coming to think of it, it would be interesting to learn how Ironteeth Witches keep their iron teeth from rustingâĶ Magic I suppose. ALSO, I NEED A WYVERN. Preferably one thatâs called Abraxos and has spidersilk wings and likes to smell wildflowers. Iâd like that very much! This book was very centred on characters, and it built their stories very well! It turned the Throne of Glass series around, and made it what I really love. I canât wait to get to Queen of Shadows now. All I say is, DO NOT GIVE UP ON THE SERIES BEFORE READING HEIR OF FIRE. "She was the heir of ash and fire, and she would bow to no one" Review: Finally the series is picking up - A massive step up from the first two books. The journey is quite intriguing and makes you hooked to where the story is going to go next.


















| Best Sellers Rank | #89 in Romantic Fantasy #122 in Epic Fantasy (Books) #173 in Paranormal Fantasy (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 136,209 Reviews |
T**N
Absolutely brilliant!
This month, I started a reread of the series to prepare for the upcoming and highly anticipated release of Kingdom of Ash, the conclusion to Aelinâs (Celaenaâs) story. At one point during my initial read of Throne of Glass, I was contemplating giving up on the series, and might not have picked up Heir of Fire at all. After reading ToG and CoM, I didnât understand what all the fuss was about, since this series was a favourite of so many people I knew. Honestly, I didnât like them that much at all the first time I read them. The writing was poor, especially the excessive use of exclamation marks which made me pause and cringe every time I came across it. The overused addressing of Celaena as âthe Assassinâ or Dorian as âthe Princeâ and Chaol as âthe Captainâ too was terrible, as if shoving their titles in my face repeatedly would make them seem more important and powerful. It just ended up annoyed me. And I didnât feel particularly connected to any of the characters (I did love Celaena though) or invested in the story. But I gave this series one last chance to redeem itself, and it did not disappoint. Heir of Fire pulled me in like none of the other books had, and carved itself a special place in my heart. From here onward, the Throne of Glass series too a major turn, a turn that set it on the course of becoming one of my favourite seriesâ. It was the book that made you either more interested and invested in the story, or hate it with all your heart. There is no in-between. Iâve read reviews that call it slow or boring or downright awful, stating that the series took a wrong turn and went in a direction that completely veered off from what it started out as. Fortunately, it was just what I needed. Heir of Fire is the story of Celaena Sardothian on her journey to becoming Aelin Ashryver Galathynius. Itâs Celaena healing from her past, from all the atrocities sheâs witnessed, from believing shes worthless, from what she was forced to endure. Itâs her coming back, from that edge she was about to tip over, when Nehemia says âdonât let the light go outâ. Celaena and Aelin are two distinctly different people. And her transformation is one of the best written Iâve ever encountered. Itâs so realistic and portrays her struggles in such a way that you are stunned by the depth of what you have read. She has to accept herself and forgive herself for her past. She has to shoulder her responsibility. She has to claim her birthright. "She was Aelin Ashryver Galathynius, and she would not be afraid" Rereads add something to the story that is lost the first time. Maybe you just pay more attention, maybe the details stick in your mind betterâĶ But the feelings invoked are stronger, and you appreciate the story more. Iâm still in awe over how Aelinâs journey was handled, and I donât think that was too important to me the first time I read it. Heaps of information Iâd forgotten were brought back, which is not particularly important or integral to the story but what I find rather interesting such as the crossing the witches made from the wastes across the White Fang mountains and Ruhnns after magic disappeared. The loss of magic meant their brooms didnât work anymore and they started to age again, so they couldnât survive in the wastes. I loved these little details that added so much depth to the story, as it built up the world beautifully. Another thing that was amazing was Aelinâs and Rowanâs friendship. It does develop into a romantic relationship I know, but it was just so pure and refreshing here. Both of them, broken and scarred people, finding happiness again by helping each otherâĶ And Iâm glad that itâs not that insta-love rubbish, because nothing, nothing, puts me off more. True love after you just meet a person? *scoffs* This is how itâs supposed to be. Respect and friendship. It seems perfectly reasonable that they should fall in love in the near future, after truly knowing each other. Rowan is the most stubborn, arrogant and prideful idiot in the whole of Erilea, and I love him to bits. I donât think anyone else could have helped bring Aelin back as well as he did, especially because he is probably the only person who went through something that was somewhat similar (though not even close to what Aelin did). He understood her, and gave her just the amount of space she needed, but also knew when to step in and help. They make such a good team, honestly. Under all the âI donât care about anyone, and I donât need any friendsâ attitude, heâs an actual cinnamon roll who desperately wants to be understood. Heâs also the most responsible and level-headed person Aelin knows, so itâs probably a good thing theyâre a team as heâll balance Aelin out nicely. Parallel stories are another thing that made the plot more interesting and intricate. We have Aelinâs healing arc, Dorianâs magic and Sorscha arc, Aedion and Chaolâs rebellion arc, and finally Manonâs introduction arc. Aedion. AEDION. AEDION. I think I may be just melting into a puddle by just thinking about him. Iâm so glad to finally have him back in the story! Heâs the sweetest, most brilliant and kindest people ever. And my heart breaks for him every time he thinks heâs not worthy of serving Aelin, or that he would do anything to see her one last time. These two are goals I swear. Aelin and Aedion could do anything together, burn the world down for all I care, and Iâd be crying with pride seeing my beautiful, stabby children together. Cause thatâs all they want. To be together again. I AM CRYING NOW. *sobs* Manonâs story was WONDERFUL. Because, dear god, I love that witch. She is cold, brutal and gloriously, fiercely wicked. Tell me why Iâd ever want anything else. Sarah J Maas could write about how Manon brushed her teeth and I would pay every cent I had to read it. Coming to think of it, it would be interesting to learn how Ironteeth Witches keep their iron teeth from rustingâĶ Magic I suppose. ALSO, I NEED A WYVERN. Preferably one thatâs called Abraxos and has spidersilk wings and likes to smell wildflowers. Iâd like that very much! This book was very centred on characters, and it built their stories very well! It turned the Throne of Glass series around, and made it what I really love. I canât wait to get to Queen of Shadows now. All I say is, DO NOT GIVE UP ON THE SERIES BEFORE READING HEIR OF FIRE. "She was the heir of ash and fire, and she would bow to no one"
D**K
Finally the series is picking up
A massive step up from the first two books. The journey is quite intriguing and makes you hooked to where the story is going to go next.
B**S
Fantasy as epic as it gets!!
After the first two lukewarm books,Heir Of Fire launches us headfirst into a labyrinth of storylines and new characters,each one leaving us confused as to who is our next obsession.(Ahem...Aedion,Abraxos,Dorian....that's all Iam saying for now)It packs a punch with both action and emotional wreckage. Okay!! So I finally finished the book and there is no way I can sit down and write a calm review,because Iam shooketh!! After the first two lukewarm books,Heir Of Fire launches us headfirst into a labyrinth of storylines and new characters,each one leaving us confused as to who is our next obsession(ahem....Aedion,Abraxos,Dorian....alright I'll stop)And it packs a punch with both action and emotional wreckage - was I ready for it? No.But did I enjoy it? Absolutely!! It was delightful to see Celaena's training arc and character growth,albeit it being a bit sluggish.But the slow burn was worth it,because the book shook me to the core with the events that unfolded in the last 100 pages(again,classic Maas-verse) Also,the Manon-Abraxos partnership was one of the sweetest plotlines I have ever read,and I was rooting for them like crazy!! To wrap it up,Heir Of Fire ends by setting the stage for bigger and better things to come.But,I think I need a little time to recover from that emotional burnout before I pick up the next book in the series
M**A
Love this book
Oh my god! This series just gets better and better. It's truly unputdownable. This book introduces some new characters to the story like Rowan and Manon. Their character development is written so very well. Reading about the magic, wyverns and demi-fae are a great way to escape the boring reality. This series is the best fantasy series I've read. It's like watching a rich fantasy movie in your head. Can't recommend it enough. The quality of the book was also good. Go for it!
M**Y
Brilliant
How to describe the awesomeness of the book!!!!! It was heart wretching.....the plot the characters the twist all well blend that will make you cry and still hold u strong ðĨðĨðĨðĨ...... God I loved all the characters All had a story to tell ,the fought for freedom and the pain they suffered.... The journey here is so be ensured and remembered ....I am amazed and baffled ðð
T**E
Awesome
Book quality is so good.. and the story, god how can anyone write like this... I mean.. I can't even think straight.
A**R
I liked this paperback a lot and the print is big ...
I liked this paperback a lot and the print is big enough that it does not take a effort to read for long time, as I have faced the problem with other Paperbacks. As for the story, This series keeps getting better and better with each book.. Eventhough I liked the first book I wouldn't have thought I would continue with the series. I started the second book by chance and couldn't stop reading.. The characters and the stories keep evolving with lots of action and adventure..
A**G
ITS AMAZING
To be bery honest, I liked it better than the second book( i mean the second book is amazing !) but this book is the book which shows the transformation of cealena sardathieon assasin of adarlan into Queen Aelin Galanthius heir of fire and you can really really relate to it( not the queen part,obviously ) because in the beginning Celeana is just really crushed and broken from pain and is running from the past and running from responsibility and just wants to be free really.And later(it doesn't happen overnight obviously )slowly she starts to realize not to be ashamed or hide from what actually happened and she accepts the pain and decides to let it become a part of her and THAT is what i can relate to. Even the characters in the book are not too cliqued.Aelin is not the picture perfect fearless heroine who is flawless in every way but a heroine who knows shes not perfect but wants to do all she can do to make a difference.....and then find out, that it makes all the difference in the end.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 weeks ago