Hey everybody! Cassia here! Here's my review of Fragile Eternity by Melissa Marr.
WARNING: Fragile Eternity
is the third book in the Wicked Lovely series by Melissa Marr. If you
have not read the first two books, I highly recommend that you stop
reading NOW. Thank you!
Fragile Eternity by Melissa Marr
Seth
wants to be with Aislinn forever. Except he’s mortal, and she’s an
immortal faery queen. But Keenan is willing to fight for Aislinn’s
heart, and wants Seth out of his way. He is convinced that for the
Summer Court to be at it’s most powerful, it needs to have two monarchs
that love each other. Seth will also do anything for Aislinn.
Including risking his life to be with her . . .
By
now, Aislinn is the Summer Queen, Keenan is the Summer King, Niall is
the Dark King, and Donia is the Winter Queen. This book mainly focuses
on Aislinn and Seth, and Keenan and Donia. So for you Niall, Iri,
Leslie, and Dark Court lovers, sorry! If I had it my way, the whole
series would be just about them. The main conflict in this book is Seth
trying to find a way to be with Aislinn forever, and nobody helping
him. Niall is in the book, but only for certain parts. When he is, you
see why Iri made him king. Keenan wants more. He isn't happy with
Aislinn just being his queen. And Donia isn't very happy about it.
There's definitely a lot of drama between them. You get Seth's POV,
which made me EXTREMELY happy. It lets you into his thoughts, his past,
and parts of his personality that weren't noticeable before. This boom
is a great follow up to the first two books, and is actually the sequel
to Wicked Lovely. Ink Exchange is really a companion book to the first book, so Fragile Eternity is the real sequel. While Ink Exchange
was dark, this book goes back to Aislinn and the Summer Court. Oh, and
you also meet Sorcha, the High Queen. Yes, there is another court.
The High Court resides in the realm of Faery, which is different from
the mortal world, and bends completely to Sorcha's will. They are the
opposite of the Dark Court, Order. Bananach is also in the book, and
she is the opposite of Sorcha. (Marr explains it a lot better, trust
me.). Overall, this book does not disappoint.
Five stars!
Goodbye for now,
Cassia
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