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Wednesday, October 30, 2024

Review: The Rose and the Thorn by Michael J. Sullivan

Title:
The Rose and the Thorn
Author: Michael J. Sullivan
Series: The Riyria Chronicles #2
Genre: Fantasy/Adventure
Publisher: Orbit
Publication Date: September 17, 2013
Edition: 376 pages, Kindle Edition
Source: Library
Purchase: Amazon US | Apple Books | Barnes & Noble | BAM | Bookshop | Powell's







Synopsis:
TWO THIEVES WANT ANSWERS. RIYRIA IS BORN.
   For more than a year Royce Melborn has tried to forget Gwen DeLancy, the woman who saved him and his partner Hadrian Blackwater from certain death. Unable to get her out of his mind, the two thieves return to Medford but receive a very different reception --- Gwen refuses to see them. The victim of abuse by a powerful noble, she suspects that Royce will ignore any danger in his desire for revenge. By turning the thieves away, Gwen hopes to once more protect them. What she doesn't realize is what the two are capable of --- but she's about to find out.
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This might actually be my least favorite World of Elan book. It's still a really great book, but it felt like the majority POV was through a character I don't care about. Hilfred (Reuben), I do not care one ounce about that character or his background. I understand why it was through his POV. Certain events had to be told from an "outside" perspective, but I still didn't care about his back story. It wasn't something I wondered after his role in Revelations was over.

All that aside, this was a plot dense book considering how short it is. One thing that can be said about Sullivan is he doesn't waste pages. There are so many books that are 500-600 pages that do not have as much plot relevant 'stuff' as books in this world/series. I do think that there could have and should have been more POV moments through Rose's eyes. Her story is so tragic and sad. I hate to think of what Ruben's father made her think that Ruben knew what was going to happen to her. He was just a kid trying to do the right thing, and his father was a selfish ass who liked to blame others for his choices.

Oddly, it felt like Royce and Hadrain took a back seat for this book. I didn't count their page time, but it must've still been at least half the book. But I didn't feel like they were the main characters of this story, and I waned them to be. I like that they have inside jokes now, and how close they've gotten in the year since they met. I totally forgot what Gwen had told Rose about her (Rose) falling in love, and since I'm using the library for this first read through I can't go back and check. Likely nothing good considering what happened to her. 

I forgot what a pone Saulder is, and I wish Ruben had said something to the King about the Bishop visiting him the day before, and what he said. Ruben didn't seem like the religious type. So he couldn't have any faith in the church, not to mention Bishop Saulder was one of the people who tired to stop him from trying to rescue the Royal family.


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