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warrior_lily 's review for:
Bluestar's Prophecy
by Erin Hunter
I wish I could give this 4.5 stars. The only thing keeping this back from a 5 was the pacing. At some points during the story, you miss entire chunks of time. I can understand the book needed to cover a very long period within 500 pages. I just think it could have been scheduled a little differently. It would not have hurt the story if we spent a little less time when she was a kit, and saw more of her deputyship.
That aside, I really enjoyed this book. Bluestar is quite the infamous character within the first Warrior series, and she always managed to bring out a strong response in me. Her character was so fiery and alive, and carried so much negativity (well, she wasn't negative, she was dark - which I can relate to)! I hated her and loved her at the same time. This book gives every little thing she does once Firepaw comes into the story a reason. If you ever wondered why Bluestar was so cranky, this answers every question. I don't want to give too much away - Warrior fans should read this Super Edition; they will not be disappointed. No wonder she was the way she was. She grew up with a bunch of douche-bags (for lack of a better term at the moment). Her father basically ignored her existence, her sister falls for a big-headed jerk, and she's surrounded by shady leadership and a half-crazed medicine cat. I'm sorry, Bluestar, honestly. I need to re-read Into the Woods (et al.) and give you a second chance.
That aside, I really enjoyed this book. Bluestar is quite the infamous character within the first Warrior series, and she always managed to bring out a strong response in me. Her character was so fiery and alive, and carried so much negativity (well, she wasn't negative, she was dark - which I can relate to)! I hated her and loved her at the same time. This book gives every little thing she does once Firepaw comes into the story a reason. If you ever wondered why Bluestar was so cranky, this answers every question. I don't want to give too much away - Warrior fans should read this Super Edition; they will not be disappointed. No wonder she was the way she was. She grew up with a bunch of douche-bags (for lack of a better term at the moment). Her father basically ignored her existence, her sister falls for a big-headed jerk, and she's surrounded by shady leadership and a half-crazed medicine cat. I'm sorry, Bluestar, honestly. I need to re-read Into the Woods (et al.) and give you a second chance.