![]() ![]() ![]() It brings together the trinity of characters who will play a meaningful role throughout the entire series: Celaena, Prince Dorian, and Chaol Westfall. Throne of Glass (2012) was Maas’s debut novel, but I read it second (as the action happens after that of The Assassin’s Blade). She is bold and tough and beautiful, but she is also young and hotheaded. The first novel (published as a prequel), The Assassin’s Blade (March 2014), introduces the swaggering teenage assassin, Celaena Sardothien, living through dark times nearly ten years after magic has left the land of Erilea. As anyone familiar with Maas’s other works would expect, Throne of Glass series includes a hefty dose of struggles (both internal and external) among a growing cast of characters who all come together in the hope of making a better world through love and friendship. Having read the other two series, I decided to surrender myself to Maas’s first world-building series it was a suspenseful, delightful descent. Both her later series A Court of Thorns and Rosesand Crescent City have massive fan followings, but Throne of Glass was her first. ![]() Maas has become a household name for YA fantasy romance. ![]() This summer, I wandered through the world of Erilea where witches, humans, and Fae live alongside all manner of creatures in Sarah J Maas’s eight-book Throne of Glass series. Summer is the best of times to pick up a good fantasy book (or series) and get lost in a world of the author’s imagination. ![]()
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