Cover of Queen of Shadows

Queen of Shadows

by Sarah J. Maas
4.8

About this book

Goodreads Choice Award Winner, Best Young Adult Fantasy, 2015 Everyone Celaena Sardothien loves has been taken from her. But she's at last returned to the empire - for vengeance, to rescue her once-glorious kingdom, and to confront the shadows of her past.... She has embraced her identity as Aelin Galathynius, Queen of Terrasen. But before she can reclaim her throne, she must fight. She will fight for her cousin, a warrior prepared to die just to see her again. She will fight for her friend, a young man trapped in an unspeakable prison. And she will fight for her people, enslaved to a brutal king and awaiting their lost queen's triumphant return.

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Paperback: $9.97 Audiobook: $0.00

What readers are saying

kristin huggins

The Queen has Arrived!

"“‘What if we go on,’ he said, ‘only to more pain and despair? What if we go on, only to find a horrible friend waiting for us?’ Aelin looked northward, as if she could see all the way to Terrasen. ‘Then it is not the end.’” — Queen of Shadows After training with the Fae in Wendlyn, Aelin Galathynius arrives in Rifthold, the capital of Adarlan, under her old pseudonym Celaena Sardothian: Master Assassin. Her purpose: to exact vengeance and free her family, friends, and people from the corrupt King of Adarlan. Queen of Shadows is the fourth book in the Throne of Glass series, written by Sarah J. Maas. I will forever have a gaping black hole of 48 hours lost from my memory, during which I fell face-first into this novel and refused to surface until it was finished. *And cue the Category 5 Book-Hangover Hurricane* You literally CANNOT put this book down! Why, you ask? Author Sarah J. Maas courted us in the previous installment, Heir of Fire, with intricate, slow-blooming character development, setting the stage for Queen of Shadows to be a non-stop rolodex of action, suspense, and all around bad-assery, making it a binge-worthy read! My lifeboat throughout this entire series: Aelin. Celaena. Queen of Shadows. Whichever alias you prefer, know this: I ADORE HER. This is something readers rarely see in fantasy literature: a heroine who is complex, broken, terrifying, and relatable: 1) Her love of couture clothing equals her love of a perfectly weighted dagger... 2) She obsesses over libraries filled with leather bound books, yet can snap a man's neck with blinking an eye... 3) She isn't afraid to shed tears, bearing her scars for all the world to see, while at the same time exhibiting an unyeilding core of strength that draws a circle of loyal followers like flies to honey... At the end of Heir of Fire, we see an Aelin who was stripped of all emotional blockades, piece by piece, layer, by layer, until she finally came to accept her true self, the identity she’s been denying for 10 years ever since the death of her parents and her kingdom: Aelin Ashryver Galathynius, the part-Fae rightful Queen of Terrasen, beloved of Mala Light-Bringer. Maas unleashes this new, powerful Aelin onto all of Adarlan and its inhabitants, who hold on for dear life as her vengeance rips through the gutters and dredges of her past. The Queen has finally arrived! We see a new Aelin here: one with confidance, power, and a firm, unwavering purpose: before she can take back her crown and claim Terrasen as her birthright, she must free her cousin Aedion Ashryver, free her friend Dorian Havilliard, the Crown Prince of Adarlan, and liberate all of Adarlan by killing its king, and the Valg demon who inhabits his body. Maas barely bats an eyes as she raises the curtain for newer characters in this series, all with rich, vivid histories: Manon (the icy Wing Leader of the Blackbeak clan of Ironteeth witches, and rider of the wyvern Abraxos), Lysandra (Arobynn’s prostitute of choice, cloaked in secrets while dreaming of freedom), Nesryn (Chaol’s apt rebel second-in-command), and Elide (a crippled servant girl who suspiciously keeps company with witches). We also dive headfirst into the twisted character of the elusive King of Thieves, murderer of Sam, and Celaena’s old employer: Arobynn Hamel (who I could not stop picturing as Klaus from Vampire Diaries!!). *At this moment, I'd like to acknowledge that I am blatantly avoiding any/all romance in this book. This was done so in an effort NOT to give away spoilers. If you've already read the book, you know. YOU KNOW. If you haven't... *drowns in feelings* Part of the reason why I fell in love this series has to do with the author’s writing process. When interviewed during QoS's production, Maas explained: “Music—especially movie scores and classical music—is usually my main source of inspiration… With book four, which I’m working on right now, I was listening to Kanye West to get into Celaena’s head — eyes closed, just thinking about her, soaking in the music. I’m not an actor by any means, but when I’m typing, I act out my scenes. I keep a mirror behind my desk; I watch myself making expressions, and then I write them.” (be still my beating heart...) EXCITING: Maas has recently begun posting playlists from her Spotify account onto her blog where readers can listen to the tracks that inspired scenes in her books (And yes, I've already listened to all her playlists...). As a musician, this SPEAKS TO MY SOUL!!! When I was 15, I would take tracks from the Gladiator soundtrack and use them as background music while reading Marion Zimmer Bradley’s Mists of Avalon. Sarah J. Maas is officially my new spirit animal. Overall, this is by far the darkest Throne of Glass installment yet. The reader is exposed to corruption, demon possession, prostitution, countless executions, slavery, abuse of the worst degree… All of us, to some extent, have a streak of darkness within; hiding, watching, waiting for the right moment to take hold and make our marionette strings rattle... Watching helplessly as Aelin takes that streak and splatters it in an arching crescendo of death and destruction, I couldn’t help but ask myself throughout this book: What if I was honed into a flawless weapon with a score to settle? Would I bring the world crashing around my feet as retribution? More importantly… would I enjoy it? At times, Aelin does. "She was a whirling cloud of death, a queen of shadows, and these men were already carrion." - QoS Aelin is broken. Her world was brutally ravaged, burnt to the ground with nothing left but ashes and despair. To save herself, she became Celaena. To save her people, Aelin was reborn. And Aelin wants vengeance. “V - ‘What was done to me created me. It’s a basic principle of the Universe that every action will create an equal and opposing reaction.’ Evey Hammond – ‘Is that how you like to see it? Like an equation?’ V – ‘What was done to me was monstrous.’ Evey Hammond – ‘And they created a monster.’” — V for Vendetta I give this 5/5 stars. ["

September 25, 2015 Verified Purchase
Booknista

I Didn't Want This to End! Love this Series, Love this Book.

"Wow, it was tough waiting for Queen of Shadows to come out, Sarah J. Maas. Really. Like angsty and painful. But, I forgive you.Because it was so damn good. There are some series that are so riveting, and the cliff hangers are so giant and emotional, it’s like an awful physical sensation when they end and the next one isn’t out yet. This Sarah J. Maas series is one of them. I’m going to make an assumption that if you're reading this review, you’ve hopefully read the other three books and I don’t need to hide where we’re at when Queen of Shadows starts. Assassin Celaena Sardothien is actually the Queen of Terrasen, Aelin Galathynius. She has traveled back to Rifthold to save her kingdom and the people she loves from the horror it has become. She knows she’s the queen, she’s embraced it and is now ready to fight for the throne. There are a few things in the way. Let’s go over the challenges: • Dorian the prince is taken over by the evil that his father commands. He’s wearing a black collar and a demon is trapped in his human body, making it to do awful things. • Aedion, her part Fae cousin, is in the king’s dungeon and facing a certain horrible death. • Chaol, her one time lover, has left the king’s guard and is leading the rebels. Which is a good thing. But, he’s not a big fan of Aelin and doesn’t trust her anymore. • The King is still the worst person ever. In fact, let's just say he's not even a person. He's THAT bad. He’s controlling a increasingly large demon army of very powerful beings, and has a whole squadron of witches at his disposal ready to battle. • Magic- still not available to anyone who may have it. This means Aelin can’t use her crazy awesome shoot fire from her hands powers. • Rowan- Aelin misses him tremendously and wishes he were by her side. • Arobynn can't be trusted, he's up to something. When the book opens, Aelin is at the Vaults. A seedy joint owned by her old boss, Arobynn. She is meeting him there to catch up on all things Rifthold and they both are hoping to covertly gain some intel on each other. Arobynn has another meeting first and Aelin is waiting her turn. She is shocked to see that he is meeting with Chaol. Chaol is his client. It’s a dangerous game he’s playing and Aelin is sure Arobynn meant for her to see it. They talk and both learn a bit. After Arobynn leaves, the King’s men storm the Vaults and destroy everything. Aelin has cleverly led them there. Well played Aelin, well played. That place was nasty and violent. No tears shed. The whole book is packed with twists and turns, adventure, action and complex relationships. We see Aedion in his cell, hoping his cousin the Queen doesn’t try to save him. He's afraid for her life. He’s trying to die before they kill him. She meets Chaol in a dark filthy sewer under the city. His guard (a woman, Nesryn, go Chaol!) found Aelin and leads her to him. They don’t trust each other. She figures prominently in the rest of the story, as a confidant, and perhaps love interest of Chaol. Aelin’s meeting with Chaol is hard to read. When friendship goes bad, loves turn sour, it’s hard to see it play out. Difficult to reconcile when you like two characters so much and they don’t see eye to eye, and instead do this dance of mistrust. Rowan ends up going to Rifthold and Aelin is thrilled and whole again. He doesn’t have any of his Fae magic there, but he’s still a strong warrior and loyal friend. He falls in with her merry band of rebels, and they set forward to rescue Aedion and take down the King. There’s so much that happens during and after the rescue, and I don’t want to spoil the adventure. It’s a very satisfying end to this series. But, it kind of feels like there could be more on the way. Like at the end of a movie and they leave it a bit open for more…yeah…just like that. I sure hope so. I give Queen of Shadows a very enthusiastic A+. ["

September 24, 2015 Verified Purchase

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