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The Last Faerie Queen

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
After risking her life in the mortal world, the faerie princess Elora returns home to incite a revolution. Allied with the Bright Queen, Elora rallies her people for a battle against her mother, the corrupt Dark Queen. While some question their ability to win, Elora senses victory, knowing she has a secret weapon: Taylor, the human boy she loves, along with a motley crew of his school friends, each armed with a skill that can turn the tide of the coming battle. But Elora's supporters in the Dark Court turn on her, believing she has forsaken them in favor of humans. And when the Dark Queen kidnaps two of her human allies, Elora resolves to mount a daring rescue mission—before her mother can offer up her friends as a sacrifice.
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    • Kirkus

      September 15, 2015
      In this sequel to The Last Changeling (2014), set entirely in Faerie, faerie princess and revolutionary Elora, supported by Taylor and a handful of other human stalwarts, continues her mission to free the faerie underclass as conflict between Bright and Dark intensifies. Relying on the Seelie Court to help free her people from her mother's brutal regime, Elora lays her plans. Shorn of her wings, she finds comfort and healing in Taylor's arms as they prepare for the struggles ahead; making and learning to use new weapons keep the humans occupied. Discovering their old nemesis, the unspeakable Brad, badly injured, they realize that the dark faeries aren't their only enemies. As the plot shifts from Seelie to Unseelie realms, the plot grows increasingly violent-humans are tortured, torrents of blood are shed, limbs are hacked off. (In contrast to this, Faerie overall is vaguely rendered, thanks to inconsistent worldbuilding.) Interrupting vividly detailed bouts of torture, alternate narrators Elora and Taylor muse elegiacally on ends vs. means; eventually the action slows to a crawl as characters make long speeches. Turgid, high-fantasy melodrama was absent from the first outing, where ethereal Elora's attempts to fit into all-too-real high school culture made for humor and grounded the plot in our familiar world. Fortunately, Taylor's distinctive voice and smart, self-deprecating humor remain narrative strengths that mask structural failings. An enjoyable-enough read for high-fantasy fans and readers with a substantial tolerance for blood. (Fantasy. 14-18)

      COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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