Erika Johanses: The Fate of the Tearling (The Queen of the Tearling #3) | Lara
Kelsea Glynn is the Queen of the Tearling. Despite her youth, she has quickly asserted herself as a fair, just and powerful ruler. However, power is a double-edged sword, and small actions can have grave consequences. In trying to do what is right - stopping a vile trade in humankind - Kelsea has crossed the Red Queen, a ruthless monarch whose rule is bound with dark magic and the spilling of blood. The Red Queen's armies are poised to invade the Tearling, and it seems nothing can stop them. Yet there was a time before the Crossing, and there Kelsea finds a strange and possibly dangerous ally, someone who might hold the key to the fate of the Tearling, and indeed to Kelsea's own soul. But time is running out...
Erika Johansen's fierce and unforgettable young heroine returns in this dazzling new novel of magic and adventure, set in the beguiling world of the Tearling.Â
After such an amazing ride The Invasion of the Tearling was, my expectations got quite raised for the third and the final book of these series. And I was definitely not disappointed. Except. But. But. But. BUT. Ending. I am. I canât start my review with an ending of the book so I am going to come back to that later.
So, Kelsea got captured by the Mort, but managed to save her country for 3 years. New World is in chaos, her country needs her, but Kelsea canât find her way out of the dungeons. Row Finn is free and terrorizing villages with zombie-children. Red Queen is not quite what she seems and Kelsea finds an unexpected ally in her.
From beginning to the very end, this book was never boring. It was full of action, battles, rebellions and plot twists. I could barely lay it down for few hours (I spent the entire 10-hour flight reading it when I was actually supposed to sleep). As in the Invasion of the Tearling this book had a mix of retrospective storyline and Kelseaâs storyline. Retrospectives tell story of pre-crossing, that is, Tearâs utopic town. Retrospectives are told from perspective of Dorianâs daughter Katie Rice and it follows the story behind Tear invasion and decay of his utopia. They are really intriguing, answer some big questions about the past of the Tearling itself, and, trough the book, they start overlapping with Kelseaâs story.
I loved Johansenâs style and how she wrapped this whole new world in magic-filled, timeless and inspiring story. Â There was not one question left unanswered, every mystery was revealed one way or another in manner that shocked me. I kept being surprised with her subtle perception that I always end up agreeing with. I loved how she showed how consequences of past actions affect the presence and that they are inseparable.
I ended up loving these characters even more after this book. I think I stated my opinion on Kelsea, her actions and attitudes in my review of Invasion of the Tearling, since she pretty much stayed the same. I loved her as a queen as well as a girl. She did everything for Tearling, every sacrifice without second thought. I never thought I would end up liking her so much, and I still canât point a certain feature I like about her, but I guess it is everything combined.
Other characters, Pen and Aisa especially, got under my skin real fast and I loved Aisaâs perspective real much. I always end up fangirling about little crazy assassins, but what can I do she was adorable.
I almost forgot about Katie and Jonathan. They had a big role in this book and I had so much fun reading about them.
All of these characters ended up in a big mess created by mistakes of people in past and I canât help but feel really sorry for them (especially Kelsea), that they had to fix otherâs careless mistakes.
âThese people are so damned proud of their hatred! Hatred is easy, and lazy to boot. Itâs love that demands effort, love that exacts a price from each of us. Love costs; this is its value.â
In the end, this was story of three girls: Lily, Katie and Kelsea, and it was one beautiful, heartbreaking and inspiring story about people, society, loss and sacrifice. It was all about them and choices they made for the better world, although in such a large space, in such a long time, three individuals seem unimportant. The three of them as much as they were different, they were the same and Tearâs jewels connected them. Through the second book, I could hardly see why has author chosen Lily, because she seemed weak and pathetic, but after everything I can see whyâŚ
I donât think I can keep writing without bringing up any spoilers so I am going to jump to the ending itself.
So, ending.
That ending.
This book had a huge number of possible endings, but I feel Erika Johansen chose the worst possible way to finish a book that was going in such an amazing direction. I know this is extremely subjective so if you liked the ending you can probably skip this part because it is going to be just a rant about it.
*also, major spoilers for ending đ*
Since the beginning of time it has been known that I have a problem with time travel. Because, if it isnât done properly it is just a disaster. Some authors manage to make it work by using small amount of time traveling or just being really, really careful about it, which I am not saying Johansesn wasnât. It was just that she could have ended this differently. Kelsea got The Crown that could take her anywhere in time to change any moment in past. So, there were basically endless possibilities around which she could go, but I would rather have it she somehow won the war than this. I donât know it feels kind of deus ex machina style.
So that was the first thing I hated about this ending. Â The second thing is how Kelsea, and ALL OTHER CHARACTERS ended up. After everything she did for Tearling, her people she ends up with basically nothing. Nothing. I hate it. I really hated it. I mean I get it, not everyone gets recognition and glory, but Kelsea lives in this perfect world she basically created by sacrificing everything and everyone she loved end up having these awesome lives without her. Nope. I canât get over Mace and Pen. I usually have nothing against good book hungover, but after finishing this it was really more a book-headache or frustration, but it was. Not. Good. Â It kind of killed everything I loved about this book.
Anyway, reading these series was really crazy and I never thought they would end up where they did. I canât throw around recommendations right now because I feel these books can impact different people really differently. You should try it if you have a thing for medieval or fantasy (although this isnât really YA, more adult) and see for yourself.
After such an amazing ride The Invasion of the Tearling was, my expectations got quite raised for the third and the final book of these series. And I was definitely not disappointed. Except. But. But. But. BUT. Ending. I am. I canât start my review with an ending of the book so I am going to come back to that later.
So, Kelsea got captured by the Mort, but managed to save her country for 3 years. New world is in chaos, her country needs her, but Kelsea canât find her way out of the dungeons. Row Finn is free and terrorizing villages with zombie-children. Red Queen is not quite what she seems and Kelsea finds an unexpected ally in her.
From beginning to the very end, this book was never boring. It was full of action, battles, rebellions and plot twists. I could barely lay it down for few hours (I spent the entire 10-hour flight reading it when I was actually supposed to sleep). As in the Invasion of the Tearling this book had a mix of retrospective storyline and Kelseaâs storyline. Retrospectives tell story of pre-crossing, that is, Tearâs utopic town. Retrospectives are told from perspective of Dorianâs daughter Katie Rice and it follows the story behind Tear invasion and decay of his utopia. They are really intriguing, answer some big questions about the past of the Tearling itself, and, trough the book, they start overlapping with Kelseaâs story.
I loved Johansenâs style and how she wrapped this whole new world in magic-filled, timeless and inspiring story. Â There was not one question left unanswered, every mystery was revealed one way or another in manner that shocked me. I kept being surprised with her subtle perception that I always end up agreeing with. I loved how she showed how consequences of past actions affect the presence and that they are inseparable.
I ended up loving these characters even more after this book. I think I stated my opinion on Kelsea, her actions and attitudes in my review of Invasion of the Tearling, since she pretty much stayed the same. I loved her as a queen as well as a girl. She did everything for Tearling, every sacrifice without second thought. I never thought I would end up liking her so much, and I still canât point a certain feature I like about her, but I guess it is everything combined.
Other characters, Pen and Aisa especially, got under my skin real fast and I loved Aisaâs perspective real much. I always end up fangirling about little crazy assassins, but what can I do she was adorable.
I almost forgot about Katie and Jonathan. They had a big role in this book and I had so much fun reading about them.
All of these characters ended up in a big mess created by mistakes of people in past and I canât help but feel really sorry for them (especially Kelsea), that they had to fix otherâs careless mistakes.
In the end, this was story of three girls: Lily, Katie and Kelsea, and it was one beautiful, heartbreaking and inspiring story about people, society, loss and sacrifice. It was all about them and choices they made for the better world, although in such a large space, in such a long time, three individuals seem unimportant. The three of them as much as they were different, they were the same and Tearâs jewels connected them. Through the second book, I could hardly see why has author chosen Lily, because she seemed weak and pathetic, but after everything I can see whyâŚ
I donât think I can keep writing without bringing up any spoilers so I am going to jump to the ending itself.
âTheyâre good, these stories,â Mace continued, his cheeks stained with light color. âThey teach the pain of others.â âEmpathy. Carlin always said it was the great value of fiction, to put us inside the minds of strangers.â
So, ending.
That ending.
This book had a huge number of possible endings, but I feel Erika Johansen chose the worst possible way to finish a book that was going in such an amazing direction. I know this is extremely subjective so if you liked the ending you can probably skip this part because it is going to be just a rant about it.
*also, major spoilers for ending đ*
Since the beginning of time it has been known that I have a problem with time travel. Because, if it isnât done properly it is just a disaster. Some authors manage to make it work by using small amount of time traveling or just being really, really careful about it, which I am not saying Johansesn wasnât. It was just that she could have ended this differently. Kelsea got The Crown that could take her anywhere in time to change any moment in past. So, there were basically endless possibilities around which she could go, but I would rather have it she somehow won the war than this. I donât know it feels kind of deus ex machina style.
So that was the first thing I hated about this ending. Â The second thing is how Kelsea, and ALL OTHER CHARACTERS ended up. After everything she did for Tearling, her people she ends up with basically nothing. Nothing. I hate it. I really hated it. I mean I get it, not everyone gets recognition and glory, but Kelsea lives in this perfect world she basically created by sacrificing everything and everyone she loved end up having these awesome lives without her. Nope. I canât get over Mace and Pen. I usually have nothing against good book hungover, but after finishing this it was really more a book-headache or frustration, but it was. Not. Good. Â It kind of killed everything I loved about this book.
I will more soon die that to decide how to rate this book, but it's going to be 4 starts in the end (it would be five if it wasn't for the ending).
Anyway, reading these series was really crazy and I never thought they would end up where they did. I canât throw around recommendations right now because I feel these books can impact different people really differently. You should try it if you have a thing for medieval or fantasy (although this isnât really YA, more adult) and see for yourself.











