City of Glass was Magical

City of Glass coverI recently read City of Glass by Cassandra Clare.  This story was great.  I bought this book used off of Amazon.com when I realized that I was #5 on the waiting list at the library, and all the books after this on the waiting list were going to become available sooner.  So I spent a few dollars for my own copy rather than waiting for this one to become available, and then waiting several more months for this story to conclude.

While this review doesn’t contain spoilers for City of Glass, it may contain spoilers for the first two books.

My experience was probably different than someone reading it in 2009, when this book first came out, because I had the benefit of being able to look up online what was going to happen between Clary and Jace.  I won’t say here what happens because I don’t want to include spoilers, but the whole incest issue between the two of them does resolve itself.  In this book.  So if you’re thinking “eeew” as you read this book, don’t worry about it.  It will get fixed.  In about 400 pages.

When we last left these characters, Clary had discovered that there was a way to cure her mother, but it required her to travel to Idris.  Jace doesn’t want her to go, however, thinking it’s too dangerous.  Fortunately, Clary has a mind of her own and isn’t about to let her brother tell her what to do.

Due to a few things that happen, both Luke and Simon end up in Idris as well, and they’re not supposed to be there.

There are bigger things to worry about than that, however.  Valentine still has the Mortal Cup and Mortal Sword, and he still wants to use them to root out what he sees as corruption in the Clave.  At least, that’s how he puts it.  Part of him just wants to take over the world.

By the time you get to the end of this book, secrets will be revealed and people will die.  We also meet new characters.  Even though I did look up spoilers to find out what was up with the whole Jace/Clary thing, reading the books up to this point clarified quite a few things.

One of the things that I appreciate about these books, that I haven’t mentioned before, is that there is a lot of Bible and historical literature in these books.  For example, Clary wrote Mene Mene Tekel Upharsin at one point, without realizing what that meant.  I recognized it as what “the handwriting on the wall” was in the book of Daniel.  We also see lines from Milton and some Latin.  These certainly aren’t theological books, but I find the references to be clever.

I also love it when books have themes to them.  The Mortal Instruments books seem to speak about corruption.  How people use power wrongly.  How people take advantage of laws to benefit themselves, even if by doing so they are acting immorally.  Through the character of Valentine, we even see how evil can package itself in an attractive manner.  These details make me enjoy the books more.

I absolutely could not put this book down, and read it in two days, despite having to work and do other things.  If you haven’t read City of Glass yet, you should continue with this story.

City of Ashes was Outstanding

City of Ashes CoverI recently finished reading Cassandra Clare’s second book in the Mortal Instruments series, City of Ashes.  I thought it was great.  You may recall that I read City of Bones a few months ago and I said that it was just good, but I expected better from books after that, since that was an early book of hers.

As this review is the second book in a series, it may contain spoilers for City of Bones.

I was correct in thinking that, because I thought that this was a great book.  My problems with City of Bones was that there were a few occasions of infodumping, and I found the reaction of the characters to some of the situations they were facing to be unrealistic.  I didn’t see those problems here.  I did see one paragraph that seemed like a little infodump, but it didn’t affect my thoughts of the book at all.

As City of Ashes begins, the character’s lives have been upended.  Clary and Jace seem to have feelings for each other but are evidently siblings, their mom is in a coma in the hospital, and their father, Valentine, is causing trouble.

Jace’s adoptive mother is having trouble believing all that happened in the first book, and calls upon the Inquisitor to find out the truth.  The Clave can use the Mortal Sword to force him to tell the truth.  But… dun dun dun!  Valentine seems to have stolen it.  Will he cause even more problems?

The Inquisitor seems to have a thing against Jace from the moment she sees him, and tries to make things difficult for him.  Unfortunately, Jace and his friends are also the only people that see what’s going on, and they have to overcome both Valentine’s forces and the Clave’s representative in order to put things right, or at least as right as they can be.

Meanwhile, Jace and Clary still obviously have non-brotherly/sisterly feelings for each other.  Clary reacts to this by forming a love relationship with Simon.  I personally didn’t like them together.  They didn’t seem to have more than friends chemistry.

I love the characters and the world in this book, and although I can’t keep all the different types of demons and blades straight, I doubt that there will be a quiz on it later.  I definitely think that City of Ashes was a great second installment to the Mortal Instruments series, and I’m looking forward to reading the next book.

City of Bones was… Good

City of Bones CoverSo I’m late to the party.  I just got around to reading City of Bones by Cassandra Clare, which is an 11 year old book.  I found it to be… good.  It’s not great, but it’s good.

I saw this book while looking through Goodreads 2018 releases, and found that Clare’s Queen of Air and Darkness is listed as highly anticipated.  I can’t start in the middle of a series, of course, so I clicked around and found this book which started it all.  Fortunately, my local library had it (although now I’m waiting to read book #2 and I’m tenth on the waiting list).

The book is about a girl, Clary, who stumbles upon a murder that only she could see.  Shortly after that, her world is completely upended when she discovers that the world that she believed to be true isn’t all there is.  Not only are there demons, werewolves, Nephilim, and vampires, but her family is a part of that world.  Over the course of this book, she discovers the truth about this world around her, and about her family.

I did enjoy this book.  Enough that I immediately got on the waiting list at the library to read the second book in the series.  I’ll probably end up reading all of the books, although that might take a while, since there’s quite a few books in this series, and there’s a waiting list at the library for most of them.  I didn’t enjoy the book enough to go out and buy the entire series.

There were a lot of things I liked about this book.  I liked the characters and their relationships.  I liked the imagery and the world-building.  I enjoyed the plot and kept wanting to read more.  The mythology was interesting.

There were some things that this story could have done better, however.  This wasn’t one of those books that sucks you in and grabs you and won’t let you go.  I’m not going to be fangirling over this book years from now after I’ve read it for the fourth or fifth time.  There were a couple of things that I found a little odd — the main character’s life was uprooted over the course of 24 hours, nearly everything she had is gone — you would think she would have a stronger emotional reaction to it.  The mythology was a little mishmashed, and that could have been better.  The final thing that I think could have been written better was, towards the end, where the characters are finding out these big revelations and… I would think that their emotional reactions would have been a little more pronounced.

This being one of Clare’s earlier works, I’m looking forward to continuing on with the series and seeing her develop as an author.  Since I’ve waited so long to read the first book, I can quickly catch up.