![]() ![]() ![]() Thor: Love and Thunder - Taika's Still Bloody Got It.Dom and Andry get a smattering of one or two POV chapters each, as does Ridha, whose name made me think of a certain famous Big Brother US contestant when it appeared on the page next to the name Kesar (which I initially misread as Kaysar, and given Aveyard's well-documented love of Real Housewives and her oh-so-LA personality, I wouldn't be surprised if she made that an intentional shout-out.) Though I'm a bit salty that Dom gets far fewer POV chapters than I'd like - I still don't quite understand why Sorasa is fan fave enough to merit all the spotlight she gets, though I do like her better in this book than in the first and I'm still convinced that Dom would've made far more sense as the protagonist than Corayne, but Taristan as her Corblood foil helps that status make its own sense. Though there are still six different POV characters, Aveyard gives much more emphasis to a certain core three - Corayne, Sorasa, and Erida. Victoria Aveyard was born and raised in East Longmeadow, Massachusetts, a small town known only for the worst traffic rotary in the continental United States. ![]() This time, though, Aveyard makes up for all those issues but good, keeping the story moving at a much brisker pace and concentrating her efforts primarily on three POVs out of the six that populated the pages of Realm Breaker. If I had any complaints about the first book in Aveyard's new and ambitious series, it was that the book was surprisingly slow and packed with too many POVs to count, and overall felt like a serious case of Prolonged Prologue. ![]()
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