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Graphic: Body horror, Child abuse, Death, Emotional abuse, Physical abuse, Toxic relationship, Violence, Blood, Murder, Fire/Fire injury, Injury/Injury detail
Moderate: Child death, Gaslighting
Minor: Genocide
Graphic: Death, Emotional abuse, Gore, Physical abuse, Suicidal thoughts, Violence, Blood, Vomit, Grief, Cannibalism, Murder
Reads like a first draft of a much better book. As is, most character development is skipped / unearned, a romance makes no sense, and tertiary character motivations change on a whim to suit the plot. Lore is poorly developed and unclear, despite the author clearly wanting us to be shocked and swayed by "reveals" later.
The only plot detail I liked was (spoilers)
Moderate: Violence
Minor: Torture
Graphic: Emotional abuse, Blood, Grief
Moderate: Child death, Confinement, Death, Violence, Kidnapping, Murder, Gaslighting
Minor: Vomit
Graphic: Child abuse, Child death, Emotional abuse, Torture, Violence, Blood, Grief
Violet in the first quarter of the book was very unlikable and bratty for really no reason other than plot. Then when she showed growth that growth got taken away by a boy who she barely knew and knew betrayed her, but it seemed like that knowledge went out the window and wasn’t brought up again. Also she was said to have hoards of talent, but it was never showcased. Aleksander was your basic dark hair broody mysterious man from other fantasy books, but done just well enough that the basicness could be overlooked. The fact that you know they will get together in the book is the only chemistry they share otherwise there is really no defining moment or relationship building that makes you want to like them as a couple.
Outside of the main characters, Summers does paint some gorgeous imagery with her worlds and has a way with making them dark when the magical veil is lifted. Her magic and gifts really do come with a price. The way she embraces dark fairytale imagery kept me going through this book. The descriptions of sacrifice and violence while not too graphic did paint a harrowing imagery. This alone secured the 3 star rating for me.
Plot wise there was a lot that was left to be desired. The missing mother was never really resolved and left open ended almost like there was going to be more to the story. It felt like a lot of plot points were introduce to propel the story without any resolution or quick fixes. The only one that felt compelling to be and I liked being open ended was the tale that was told to give premise to the curse. Stories change over time and that was a great use of that device.
I am genuinely curious as to what Georgia Summers has to offer in her writing future and see how she grows as a story teller. This book might not have been for me but it was a nice quick read for me.
Moderate: Torture, Violence
"The City of Stardust" follows Violet Everly. As an Everly, Violet is part of her family's penance for a crime no one remembers. Each generation, an Everly is called upon and disappears because of Penelope. Penelope never seems to age or become sick. Violet's mother left one night in the hopes of breaking the curse, but she has not been heard from since. Now Violet has to figure out how to break the curse, or she will become the next Everly to disappear.
This was a really fun and quick read. The writing is equal parts magical and approachable. I really appreciated that the magic was not complicated, and that all of the characters were enjoyable to read from.
This story felt very high stakes, but not in an obnoxious way. I did not feel like the author was constantly reminding the reader of what would happen if Violet failed, and when it was brought up, it was not thrown in the reader's face.
I recommend this story to anyone who wants an easy to consume, mystical story.
Graphic: Violence, Blood, Stalking
Moderate: War
Parts somehow both whimsical and horrifying? Think Pan's Labyrinth vibes, but also completely different. The whole book is a vibe, moody and dark and pushing for answers. Violet struggles, realistically so, after spending a life sheltered and safe. She bumbles stubbornly through her deceptions, navigating secret society, unknown magic, and a family curse on the brink of fruition. This tale is saturated with betrayal, haunted with Violet's childhood memories, but also so full of hope and determination. The world is just a key-turn away. The romance is pretty good too, right person wrong time with a dash of enemies to lovers. I can't really say more without spoilers!
I listened to this via Libro.fm and immediately looked up what other books this narrator has done- this was the first. I'm so excited to hear what projects Kitty Parker does next, her different intonations for each character were SO GOOD. Sexy evil for the big bad, brooding and cautious as Aleksander, challenging and strong willed as Violet, and the poor exasperated and exhausted brothers.
Graphic: Death, Gore, Homophobia, Physical abuse, Suicidal thoughts, Torture, Toxic relationship, Violence, Blood, Kidnapping, Grief, Stalking, Murder, Gaslighting, Injury/Injury detail
Violet Everly's family is seemingly cursed. A debt to be paid for a deal made so long ago. A world of magic doors and keys, scholars and star metal, all kept secret from Violet by her Uncles' in an attemptto protect her. But as time runs out on her ten year deal, Violet runs away looking for answers, straight into the arms of Aleksander. But what are his true intentions? What secrets does he keep? Will Violet break the curse in time, or will Penelope, her hunter, win once and for all?
This story had so much promise, but everything lacked depth. The characters needed to be fleshed out more. Many of their actions made little to no sense. The pacing of the story seemed off. And the resolution felt rushed and confusing. This was just not one for me.
Moderate: Child death, Violence, Murder
Essentially, after finding out that her family (nore specifically, Violet) is cursed, Violet spends a year of her life running around the world trying to find her mother who ran away when Violet was 8. She befriends a scholar who is about as interesting as drywall, and encounters Gods (
Everyone in this story hides the truth from Violet and is super vague about everything, but somehow Violet knows where to look after conversations that hold about as much weight as air. The only tolerable character is Caspian who gets about 5 pages. The only character who has a set nationality is Yury (
Fidelis is definitely, 100% based on Velaris from ACOTAR with it being a City of Stars (granted it is Stardust instead of Starlight). A city which is visited maybe 3 times total and not for very long each time it is mentioned. The city is but a vague promise to the reader in the greater scheme of things, especially when the majority of the story takes place somewhere in the world.
There is some absolutely gorgeous writing and scene-setting in this book for sure. The sentence structure is genuinely stunning. The chapters are short and easy to get through without issue. However, the pacing is just so weird and at times I felt like I was missing context for what was happening and why.
I genuinely have no idea what that book was and I am massively disappointed with it. I should have saved myself the time and energy and DNFed.
Graphic: Child death, Death, Torture, Violence, Blood, Abandonment
Moderate: Kidnapping, Fire/Fire injury, Injury/Injury detail