The Iron Butterfly (Iron Butterfly #1) by Chanda Hahn


The Iron Butterfly (Iron Butterfly #1)
Title : The Iron Butterfly (Iron Butterfly #1)
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : -
Language : English
Format Type : Kindle Edition
Number of Pages : 280
Publication : First published February 20, 2012

Alternate cover edition of ASIN
B007BKQPJ2



Imprisoned, starved and left with no memories, Thalia awakens to find herself at the mercy of an evil cult known as the Septori. Their leader has chosen Thalia as the test subject for a torture device of untold power, designed to change and twist her into something that is neither human nor Denai.

Escaping, Thalia finds an unwilling warrior to protect her and an unlikely Denai to befriend her. After finding a home at the Citadel as a servant, Thalia’s worst nightmare comes to life and she begins to show signs of power. Scared and unable to control her gifts, she tries to hide her past to fit in among the Denai. But the Septori want their latest test subject back and will stop at nothing to retrieve her, dead or alive.


The Iron Butterfly (Iron Butterfly #1) Reviews


  • ✨Selena Yukino✨

    The only reason I'm continuing this trilogy is because of Faraway, and Kael. That's all. I hate everybody else.

  • Gabs

    Read more of my reviews at
    My Full Bookshelf

    I love, love, love, loved this book. Plus one more love for emphasis. Chanda Hahn is such an amazing author! I purposely refused to read any of the reviews so that they wouldn't bias me while I was reading, and I think this helped me enjoy it even more than usual.

    I have been wanting a book that I can fangirl about for a while now. This one fits the bill. So...just let me gush about Kael for a sec. And I am sorry that this isn't a proper review. I just...the amazingness has stunned me.

    HE'S SO MYSTERIOUS!! Oh my goodness, I think he may even be better than Jared from Unenchanted (same author) You just want to read more about him.

    And then there's Joss, who is the sweet and kind nice guy. (Therefore, I think Kael's going to be the guy Thalia ends up with, even though they currently have a love/hate, but mostly hate, relationship right now. They'll get together. Eventually.:D But back to Joss.) He's so sweet!

    Now, Thalia. I thought she was a pretty cool character. She was able to overcome the torture the Septori put her through, and go from being a scared and meek victim to a pretty kick-butt heroine, in my humble opinion. I can see some people thinking that she wasn't strong enough, but my reply would be to think about how you would act if you were getting tortured by an evil cult, and all your memories were gone so you had no idea who you were. (Speaking of which...THAT ENDING! AHHHH!) So, I DO think she was a pretty strong heroine.

    And Faraway! I can't leave him out of this review. I loved him! I can't say anything else, though, without giving away major spoiilers.

    There were a few grammar mistakes in here, but they weren't too bad. Anyone who couldn't stand Unenchanted because of the spelling errors shouldn't be afraid to try out this book.

    This was so good. I cannot wait to get my hands on The Steele Wolf!

  • Dianna

    Interesting premise, but the book didn't feel like a complete book, more like an introduction to the main characters and the world. There is no lead up to any kind of climax, just the Thalia and everyone else living out their lives out with some splashes of excitement thrown in once in a while.

    Also, the writing wasn't the greatest...especially in the beginning and middle of the book. I often mentally cringed at some of the author's descriptions and her portrayal of the characters, especially Thalia, who had what I thought were some pretty odd lines for the situation she was in. This book could use some heavy editing.

    The romance also felt very haphazard--whatever is between Thalia and Joss happens almost without warning. Sure, she's attracted to him when she meets him for the first time, but that's the nature of the Denai. I'm not sure how this should lead to the mutual attraction they feel for each other without much interaction (at least not that the reader knows about) in-between.

    [spoiler]I'm almost positive this story is going to end up with a love triangle with Kael and Joss fighting for Thalia's affections. Not sure what's up with Kael's situation, but he almost felt like an Edward with the number of times he told Thalia that she's better off if she hates him and stays away from him. That trick is getting old, and as that was the entire side of Kael the readers got to see, he came off as a very one-sided character (not that the other main characters were much better).[/spoiler]

    If you can get past the cringe-inducing writing and the flat characters, the story is interesting, but read this at your own risk! I'll be looking out for the next book as I want to have some questions answered instead of being left with a huge pile of questions.

  • Ashley

    1.5 Stars (Only tacking on the .5 because I really liked Kael, for those 40 pages he was actually in the book)
    Definitely underwhelmed! For this having a 4.2 rating, I went in with pretty high expectations, but this book was a disaster. The world building is horrible, the author doesn't explain anything, I still don't even really understand what a denai is after finishing this book. The MC is absolutely pathetic. I recall that she stomps her foot a few times when she doesn't get her way, and throws the blame oneveryone except herself. No wonder Kael is pissed at her all the time. Nothing happens in this book at all, except that the MC whines about her life for 200 pages, and nearly gets her ass killed four times. And the romance! Don't get me started! Thalia knows Joss for a DAY, and suddenly they're supposedly the best of friends? Even though Thalia was passed out for 2/3 of that first day they knew each other! Yeah, that just screams best friend right there! And for her to be jealous about Joss and other girls after barely knowing him is downright ridiculous! The only thing I liked in this book was Kael, and even he's not enough to keep me going on to book two. Only recommended if you're into extremely light, no world building, same recycled YA fantasy plot, then you might find this entertaining.

  • Christa

    Do you like your damsels distressed? Swooning? Fainting? Love triangles?

    Thalia is a prisoner, undergoing torture treatments in a machine she thinks of as the Iron Butterfly. She has no memories of her life before prison.

    A prison break is made by fellow prisoner Kael, and Thalia is found adrift in the river by Joss and his friend. She has no where to go, so she tags along with Joss to the capital city.

    There are humans, and then there are the Denai, who are beings who resemble humans but have gifts. They are dying out, and they take safe haven in the Citadel. Joss is a Denai, and he is on his way to the school there.

    The school meets with Thalia, and agree to take her in. She is given a position as a servant while the Adepts investigate who kidnapped her. Humans don’t have Denai powers, but Thalia finds herself having bizarre nightmares and strange abilities from her time in the Iron Butterfly.

    So besides the fact that there are a ton of ya tropes here, I did enjoy the story. There is a love triangle (I’m rooting for you Kael), a heroine who makes some really bad decisions, and there’s a lot of blacking out. Girl should probably see a doctor, it’s not ok to faint that much. But the memory loss was well done, and so was the angst over the fact that the book start with the main character being straight up tortured. I hate it when you have a character who has been through a lot, and it’s all, well the past is the past, moving on, let’s never mention this again.

    All in all, a YA fantasy that has room to grow.

    3.5 Stars

  • Meghan

    I don't know why I thought this was a steam punk book/ title maybe? But I'm so not that into steam punk, so I put off reading it, even though I loved her unenchanted series. So cute, so funny, totally tween friendly. The kind of books your face hurts after reading for a long stretch because u have been grinning like a fool the whole time u read it. This book was exactly the same. Why did I not read it sooner?? The protagonist is a mess. She smarts off, then freaks out, clams up, is scared spitless, backbones' up, tries to win- then looses. Gets up again. Blushes, messes up, feels pride, shame, giggles with her girl friends. All in the most believable human way. Not this tough girl I'm so bad ass or emo everybody hates me but I'm still going to sacrifice myself to save the world crap in every other YA book out there.
    I especially like when she is having a tiffy, or being mean and knows it, acknowledged it internally, does it anyway, and then feels crap about it later. Yep- me too.

  • Claudie Muchindu

    I have struggled to bond with this book. I love the idea of it but the characters seem too stiff and the decisions don't make logical sense to me within that world, leading me to have too many "huh?" moments.

    Perhaps one day I will get back to it as I have gone halfway through but I have stopped enjoying the read. But I haven't given up hope.

    Edit:

    I finished this and Thalia is beyond basket case and I cannot really understand her.

  • Heidi Garrett

    This is the second book that I have read by Chanda Hahn, the first being UnEnchanted. Hahn is a gifted storyteller with a complete lack of pretense in her writing. And it's that same straightforward style that has kept me on the fence as I read each of her books--everything seems so simple--but her wit, neat plots, and endings win me over.

    The Iron Butterfly is the first book in the Iron Butterfly epic fantasy series. The story moves forward from the first page. With its abundance of traditional fantasy elements, I worried I might get bored, but Hahn keeps it fresh and inventive. But what bumped it up to five stars, for me, was the end. That last chapter ties the entire book up like a length of string being pulled around a burlap sack, hiding the gold inside. From the first page, Thalia's temperament, personality, survival, and choices make sense. It's really lovely.

    And it seems...the second book in the series, The Steele Wolf has just been realeased...

  • Mita

    Interesting and intriguing.
    Though there are a handful of grammatical errors throughout, they are nothing heinous and the read is worth it.

    Though the Denai are a little harder to relate to, being as perfect as they are, Thalia is perfectly imperfect enough to root for and continue reading in a quest to find the answers she needs.

    Recommended by me.

  • Brenda

    I wasn't too impressed with this, which is disappointing for me because the synopsis sounded amazing. I kept waiting for the part when I would actually see some real personality, but it never came. Thalia was essentially whatever the author needed her to be right at that moment. In the beginning, she's desperate and whiny and apparently latches on to whoever has even the most minuscule bit of leadership; she's apparently been trapped for months (years?) and the first person (at least as far as we know) that says he can break out--without any proof, I might add--her first reaction is "take us with you!".

    She has this obsession with Cammie, and we have no idea why. We're told Cammie was different from the other girls that Thalia bunked with in the cell, but no reasons are given. She's just different because she says so.

    When she's with other people once she escapes, she bounces between different traits constantly. She's brave and snarky when telling off that one girl, and friendly and kind to Avina, yet flips out if Joss so much as brushes against her. Why? There's no mention of sexual assault or something while she was in the prison, so why would she pull away from him, but no one else? Because it makes for a better "love story", that's why.

    Which is another thing that bothered me. She's supposed to be totally traumatized, yet after waking up from a psychotic episode her first reaction is to snap at the sexy boy-toy and say "I don't like it when you think I'm childish and call me Little Fish." It didn't seem likely, and this, among other scenes, just had me rolling my eyes.

    Also, speaking of eyes, EVERYONE AND THEIR MOTHER HAS BLUE OR GREEN EYES IN THIS BOOK EXCEPT THE BITCH. I'm so sick of brown eyes being considered ordinary or unattractive. And plus, hardly anyone in the population has blue or (even less) green eyes. Statistically those color eyes will go extinct very soon, I think it was something like 50 years? Now granted this isn't the only book that does that, but unfortunately it's the one that gets the brunt of my frustration. You don't have to have green or "icy" blue eyes to be attractive. I actually prefer brown eyes.

    Plus, she was far too focused on sexual/physical desires with guys. She's been held captive for how long and the only thing she ever notices is whether or not a guy is attractive, then proceeds to flinch away from any contact. It doesn't make sense. If she was abused in prison her first reaction wouldn't be to put herself so close to so many guys. If she wasn't abused, then why does she flinch? Her attitude in general was far too wry as well. Snark and sarcasm galore.

    There were little errors spaced throughout, sometimes the wrong word being used or a word totally omitted. It wasn't terribly distracting, but enough to be noticeable.

    Overall I just wasn't impressed. I've been wanting to read another work by this author for a while, so hopefully I'll have better luck with that one.

  • Haley

    After stumbling upon and adoring Chanda Hahn’s UnEnchanted in January, I have been waiting to read more of her work. I didn’t think I could like anything as much UnEnchanted but let me tell you…The Iron Butterfly is a book that will quickly become one of your favorites!

    Thalia is a strong and wonderful heroine. There are times where she seems weak and defeated, but her strength lies in her ability to overcome. Even when she’s her weakest…she’s strong. Thalia is a survivor. She may not see it or believe it, but she is.

    Along the way, Thalia develops wonderful relationships and deep friendships. Nothing was instant. The strong foundations of her relationships helped her become the survivor she was meant to be.

    Throughout The Iron Butterfly Thalia still has no idea who she really is or where she comes from. She only knows the Septori held her prisoner and used her as a test subject for something evil and sinister. She has so many questions with no answers. For every obstacle she overcomes, Thalia is held back because she only knows herself as a prisoner of the Septori and a guest of the Denai.

    Her unlikely friendship with a powerful and determined Denai, Joss, develops into something so much more. Thalia wants to give him her heart but knows that doing so wouldn’t be fair to him until she knows exactly who she is. Thalia and Joss share a deep bond and have very sweet and honest moments. These moments will give readers hope for both Joss and Thalia’s future…whether together or apart.

    There’s one particular character that seems to prefer Joss and Thalia be apart. Kael is a SwordBrother and the man that rescues Thalia at every turn. Kael and Thalia prove throughout The Iron Butterfly that there is a fine line between love and hate. What kind of love? I have no idea but something is there. Their encounters are so beautifully described, readers will be able to feel the tension and emotion below the surfaces of both Thalia and Kael.

    The ending leaves readers wanting to know more. Needing to know more. I’m a sucker for a happy ending…it gives me hope. Chanda Hahn says “Not all fairy tales have happily ever afters. Some just have afters.” In the case of The Iron Butterfly series, I really hope a happily ever after is in store.

    Chanda Hahn is a force to be reckoned with. She created a world so exciting supported by characters that are beautifully developed and deep. You’ll be completely immersed in Thalia’s journey and with every turn, you’ll grow to love The Iron Butterfly and the beginning of Chanda Hahn’s riveting new series.

    Chanda Hahn is a refreshing and wonderful addition to the literary world. I believe in her voice. I believe in her writing. I believe she can and will change books. Most importantly, I believe in her and you will too!

  • Berrynana

    I just cannot understand why this book has such a high rating... The main character is extremely frustrating and kind of dense.

    She was subjected to torture on some kind if device, for some unknown reason. She doesn't know who she was or where she came from. She manages to just barely escape and yet...she is not traumatized in the least. In fact, the first thought she has after her escape, is that her rescuer is inhumanly handsome. She has no depth whatsoever, she reminds me of a certain sparkly vampires belle.

    I've read books by this author before and I did enjoy them. I don't think I can handle reading the next in this series though. If you like a smart and strong female character, this book is not for you...

  • Alicia Huxtable

    Fantastic

    This is a really well written and engaging story with fantastic characters. I couldn't put it down. This is definitely a must read series for me

  • Emmeline (The Book Herald)

    Actual Rating- 3.5

    Big Thank you to my Goodreads friend Priscila who recommended this to me!

    This book for the most part was pretty great, there were some bits where i cringed and thought that could have been done better. However, like i mentioned above, it was pretty great to read.

    The plot goes a little something like this:

    Thalia doesn't know who she is or where she came from.
    One thing she does know,
    She's going to die.
    Not by illness, though that could happen. Not by a natural disaster.
    No, Thalia knows that she will die in the torture chamber of the Septori.
    "Down in this hell, silence was more than golden; it was the difference between life and death."
    Whatever experiments they are doing is slowly killing her...or is it?
    Agony is what she feels everyday. Red is the colour she wear because of the blood stains on her tunic.
    Thalia knows she will die, that is, until another captive arrives.
    She believes him to be a Denai- those with powers, but this man is something altogether brilliant.
    A blue eyed warrior.
    Thalia is rescued by him and lands in the arms of a green eyed boy who heals her wounds.
    The Septori do not lose. The raven is after her.
    Even with the Denai protecting her, Thalia knows, she will never be safe.


    "Thalia, if you don't want to be the prey anymore, then you can only do one thing. Become the hunter."

    Okay this book was a great Amazon freebie and as a starter for a new series, it definitely held my interest!

    There are many cliche bits and some of the conversation where i was like: "where the heck did that come from?" or "how did she assume that?!"

    But otherwise, i didn't mind.

    I LOVE KAEL. I'm sorry Joss. You're great and everything but i have a thing for blue-eyed hotties who are great at wielding daggers i may need help after admitting that

    "Thalia, I already said: You should hate me. It's safer."

    There is a love triangle that could potentially bud into a love square. So some moments had me face-palming, while others had me absolutely excited.

    There is action in here too. I mean let's face it, there are assassins after her all the time.

    I will admit to some parts confusing me and seeming a bit unrealistic...well, as realist as you can get in a fantasy. but other than that, give me the second book!

    Side note- that ending came out of nowhere!

    Thanks again Priscila! I like your recommendations!

    stay wonderful!

    -The Book Herald

    tweet me @thebookherald



  • Maki ⌒☆

    This book starts off incredibly slow. You don't even really get to know the main character, Thalia, until around chapter three or four. After that, the story picks up the pace. If you're one of those people who needs a bit of closure, this probably isn't the book for you. More questions get brought up than they get answered. By the end, you're left trying to figure out what exactly is going on.

    You don't really get to know anyone in this book. You're introduced to characters, but very little about their motives or histories are explained. The main character has amnesia. Joss is just thrown into the story, without much of an introduction. Are his parents still alive? They're never mentioned. He travels with his godfather. Come to think of it, I'm pretty sure Darren is the most fully formed character in this book. And he's only there for all of two and a half chapters.

    You've got a few more side characters in the Citadel staff and the Adepts. The only other student ever named is...you know, I can't even remember her name. Starts with an S. Cirrus' niece. The mean one. Her.

    Faraway was interesting. I thought it was cute how he got his name, and it actually fit him rather well. I was very glad he wasn't named Cinnamon, or Snow, or some other stereotypical fantasy horse name. He was a rather well-written character. It says something about this book that the best written characters are barely there at all...and a horse.

    Kael was just confusing. He's clearly an assassin-type character, which instantly makes me like him...but nothing about him gets explained. At all. He's one of those parts of the book where you're just left with more questions than you started with. That was incredibly frustrating. I really, really wanted to like him as a character...but I wasn't given a chance to learn anything about him.

    The strange love...rectangle?...between Thalia, Joss, Kael, and Garit was obnoxious. It's annoying when writers do that. It does not add romance or suspense to the story in any way. We know what will happen. Lord, it's Vampire Dairies all over again.

    For all my complaints, it really wasn't such a bad book. Just a bit frustrating. The next book is already out, so I guess I'll get around to reading it. Who knows? Maybe the next one will actually answer some questions.

  • Sarah Elizabeth

    This started out pretty good, but around the 23% mark it just went downhill for me and wasn’t able to recover.
    6 out of 10

  • alexandra

    i only care about the horse and the lettuce guy. the rest of y’all can choke

  • Daphne

    Full of grating cliches, inexplicable angst, and unlikable characters, The Iron Butterfly will leave you facepalming like you've never facepalmed before.

    The main thing that irked me were the characters themselves. Thalia, the protagonist, was self-centered and irritating beyond belief. She treated anyone who did anything she didn't like horribly, even if there was an understandable reason behind it. She told people to go away and leave her alone and then blamed them when they weren't there to fix things. She also treated her elders disrespectfully, yelling at them just because she didn't like to be told what to do. Headstrong protagonists do this all the time in novels, that's true. For example, Rose from Vampire Academy had a penchant for this. However, she got her ass kicked from time to time when she went off to do her own thing, and she learned that heeding advice from others was as important as following her own heart. Thalia always did things her way, and they always seemed to work at. Even though she was disrespectful, everyone seemed to love her all the same. As a bonus, Thalia also enjoyed making meaningless interjections just to get the final word in.

    "It's called Hartswood, and it's great for horses and cattle when they get any serious cuts or scrapes." "I'm not cattle!" I interjected.

    Awesome. Thank you. Thank you so much for making that distinction for us.

    "What? Joss, how could you? You had no right." I could feel my anger rise, but I was also confused. It's what I secretly wanted, wasn't it, not to be bait?

    Lmao. Even though it's what she wants, she wants to rebel just because she can rebel.

    The other characters weren't intricate at all, straight black and white, good or bad. You knew straight off the bat who would be causing the problems and who would be helping Thalia. People aren't just good and bad. In my opinion, there are always shades of gray in between. Although I'm fine with some plain evil people in books, I believe that depth in a character is what makes that character stand out from the rest. For example, an evil person can seem evil at first, but where do their motives lie? Do they secretly have good intentions, but their intentions don't look that great from another perspective?

    Onto the next issue. The insta-love triangle. It was actually amusing to read. I mean, it's only normal to start getting jealous because a girl is fawning over a boy you met all of one day ago right? Mhm. Completely normal. And then after the way Thalia treated him, he all of a sudden falls in love with her too. I really don't see the appeal. And then Kael. He falls in love with her and ends up "accidentally" saving her life multiple times after knowing her for like 10 minutes. AND THEN, another character notices that whenever Thalia is around Kael, the dark cloud that seems to always be surrounding him just goes poof. It's definitely not because of her charismatic personality, that's for sure. Every time they were together, Thalia yelled at him and blamed him for things that were out of his control.

    The Iron Butterfly was also very predictable. This is mostly because of the black and white motives of the characters. You knew, ages before it happened, how this character was going to react to that character and vice versa.

    Yet despite all the problems I had with this book, I still enjoyed it to a degree. I loved the world that this story took place in and all the cool powers. It had the dreaded love triangle and the angst and the predictability, but it was still a nice, fun break from the series I'm currently reading.

    Rating- 2.5/5

  • Kelly Page

    As soon as I started reading this book I began to get feelings that I had heard this story before. Maybe I read it before and forgot to mark it as read? I couldn't remember so I read on. Chapters later it was more and more familiar, but i started thinking of Yelena instead of Thalia. Then it hit me...Magic Study, by Maria V Snyder! I loved that booked :) So I thought to myself, it could just be a coincidence, some of the general ideas might be the same. It had been a few years since I read the Study Series so I could be remembering incorrectly. Nope.

    Its almost as if this book was came about after someone read Magic Study and said "Hey, I like that world/concept! Let me write about it". But it's not as good as the original. At all.

    Some comparisons:

    Thalia escaped a vile torturer of humans named Raven who tried to by nefarious ways to make humans magical.
    Yelena escaped a vile torturer named Mogkan who is capturing young girls to steal magic

    Thalia has no memories of her past
    Yelena has no memories of her past

    Thalia goes to the Citadel, a place to learn from the adepts who are the high 'magicians' that teach and protect budding magicians in a school like environment where they are treated as special people and have servants and such.
    Thalia goes to the Citadel, a place to learn from the high magicians that teach and protect budding magicians in a school like environment where they are treated as special people and have servants and such.

    Thalia has powers that emerge for the first time by seeing others memories.
    Yelenas powers start as telepathy

    Thalia's powers are not quite normal so she's special
    Yelena's poweres are not quite normal so she's special

    Thalia's torturer is hunting for her
    Yelena's torturer is hunting for her.

    Then I stopped.

    I really loved Magic Study and reading a watery somewhat mirror version of it just doesn't interest me.

  • Cher

    Thalia wakes up in a prisoned in a place where she doesn't know how she got there or anything about her past. When the new guy, Kael, arrives, he manages to escape, freeing those who were locked in there. When Thalia escapes but ends up passing out. Darren and Joss rescue her and bring her to the Citadel, (kind of like the capital for them), to tell the authorities about what happened to her about the Septori, the people who imprisoned her, practicing things on her and others there. When things begin to happen the Septori starts to come after her, they want her back and won't stop until they get her back, no matter the cost.
    I got this book for free on my kindle, it sounded soo good and wow was it good. My favorite characters were the side characters, Kael and Garit, they were my favorites even though they weren't mentioned as much as I wanted. What I didn't like was how Thalia acted at times I felt like she was kind of dragging things out, like we already knew some things but she dragged it out sometimes. I liked however at times she gave us information that we needed to know but then at other times she gave us to much to focus on. I loved how she wrote out this book. I can wait to read the next book soon.

  • Michelle Mcroberts

    *6/25/14 - 3rd read - Love it every time...there are places that could be developed more in order to lengthen and flush out the story a bit, but I don't need that to enjoy the story. I can't wait to read the third book finally!

    *1/7/13 - Feeling the need to re-read this!! Love the story and cannot wait for the next one!* 2nd read (one day)

    8/21/12 - I absolutely loved this story. After reading
    UnEnchanted and
    Fairest I was looking to read something else in this fun author's style. Her writing is fun, unique, has a clear voice, and after reading and enjoying the other series, I was excited to try this book.

    I am sooooo drawn in. I love the premise behind it. There is so much shrouded in mystery in this book, and the author carefully reveals pieces of information to the reader as the protagonist finds things out for herself. I can't wait until more books are put out in this series!

  • Coyora Dokusho

    I was cruisin' Ilona Andrews blog and reading recommendations that people were giving for her kid. 'Kay I thought, if they like Ilona Andrews, then they must know their stuff. I was wrong, so very, very wrong. I'm not going to waste my time reading the rest of these books. I'm gonna do that thing that I do where I go read all the reviews to get spoilers on how it turns out. Because I need to know how it turns out, because I'm compulsive like that but basically this book consisted completely of a never-ending stream of LOGIC FAIL linked together with tell-not-show. I never became emotionally involved with the characters. I found the emotional responses and interpersonal interactions of the characters unrealistic and awkward. Also, LOGIC!!! FAIL!!! And lots of blah-blah-blah, I don't care, blah-blah-blah feelings were engendered in me as I read. But I didn't absolutely and completely hate it so TWO STARS.

  • Jaclyn

    What book are you positive review folks reading?

    The premise sounded pretty good and all the positive reviews sold me on trying it out. However, I felt it devolved into pretty forgettable YA schlock, in fairly short order. Girl torn between two guys, all sorts of teenage awkward - add in stilted, unnatural dialogue, poor editing and horrifically poor, adverb riddled narrative, and I'm just not impressed, sorry. It makes Twilight look like it should earn a Pulitzer.

    Also, there is no true ending to this book, it reads as the first act of a novel, rather than a stand alone book. There is a difference between having a trilogy and having a book cut and published into several volumes, this is most certainly the latter. Unfortunately, for the author, I was just happy enough to finish this up to move onto another book. I can't find a care to give over finding out what happens to Thalia, Kael and/or Joss.

  • Megan

    I liked this book a lot, though in the beginning I was a little confused as to what was happening. However, even with being confused this was a book I didn't want to put down and so finished it rather quickly.

    Thalia was an interesting character. I loved Darren, Joss, and Kael! By the end of the book I started to understand a lot more, but so many things were also left unexplained/unanswered.

    One of my complaints with the book was the many errors: wrong words used (such as "too" instead of "to" or "sweat" instead of "sweet", words that were quite obviously missing, missing punctuation, etc.. I think if this book was edited and these problems were fixed this book would be a strong 4-5 star book. However, for a Kindle freebie I can't complain too much.

    3.5 stars

  • Sibil

    4.5 stars

    Datemi il seguito adesso e nessuno si farà male!

    Ok, maybe 4.5 stars are a little bit too much, but I loved it! And I want the second one ASAP! I was hooked up and I enjoyed every page, even if I would have hoped for a different ending. But that's ok. I really enjoy the characters, the story and the writing. The world is really intersting but the author could have developed it more. But it was interesting and well done, too, so I am not complaining. It remind me a bit of the Study's series by Snyder, a series that I loved, so I was really happy during the reading!

    Italian review of the series here:
    http://theroadtohellispavedwithbooks....

  • Jay

    I found this book very boring and dragged on. I just kind of wanted it to be over once I began it.

    OK, so I didn't like this book because the actual plot building was just like so many. I know this was sells to teens but there just wasn't that much originality.

    You have teen girl who becomes strong once she has confidence from a special gift. Then you have a girl who can't decided if she likes a boy oh and you add another boy o the mix. Its just so plaid out in fantasy books. It would be OK if it added to the plot as a whole but it doesn't. I just feel as if there needed more action and more depth. Yes that's what the book is missing character and story depth.