![]() ![]() ![]() Again, I don’t seek out mysteries because it’s a genre that I don’t enjoy, so your mileage with that aspect of the book may vary. Once the mystery was resolved/revealed, I was fully in the narrative and loving everything, but until then I seriously considered putting it down. I couldn’t enjoy most of the book because I was so confused and frustrated about that confusion that it overshadowed the rest of the experience. This book takes everything you thought you knew at the end of the first book, sets it on fire, and throws it out an airlock into space. ![]() I should clarify that the first 80% was still interesting and may work well for other readers, but I don’t enjoy unreliable narrators or mysteries and that is what the narrative hinges on. I’m giving it three stars instead of two because I loved the final fifth of the book. That’s all that can really be said without massively spoiling the plot.Ĩ0% of this book did not work for me and unfortunately it was the first 80% of the book. ![]() As the enemy approaches and time runs short, Harrow is left facing a mystery around a possible traitor and battling against the deceptions of her own mind. But the process went wrong and Harrow is struggling to master the skills she will need to face an enemy strong enough to challenge her God. In Tamsyn Muir’s Harrow the Ninth, sequel to Gideon the Ninth, Harrow has cracked the mystery of becoming a Lyctor and joined the Emperor as one of his saints. ![]()
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