Title: The Glass Magician
Author: Charlie N. Holmberg
Genre: Fantasy
Source: Library paperback
Rating: 2 out of 5 paws
Ceony has just turned 20, and it has been a few weeks or months since she saved Mg Thane from the blood magician who stole his heart, literally. She had hoped things would go back to normal. But then an explosion at a paper mill sparks a series of events that place Ceony in the center. Other blood mages are looking for her to find answers to the power she holds. A power she doesn't fully understand herself. A particularly evil magician believes Ceony holds secrets about bonding to different elements and vows to extract that information no matter the costs. Ceony has to test her limits in order to save herself and those she loves while keeping her secrets from falling into the wrong hands.
Lets begin with the antagonists. There was no depth to them, we don't get the feel of urgency with them. It was interesting enough the Grath wanted to unbind from glass then bind to blood, there not motivation or explanation as to why. The story makes it seem like the only element powerful enough to be consider deadly is blood, but as we see later in the novel some of the other elements are just as powerful. I wish Holmberg showed more of how powerful paper can be, to show that people are wrong for thinking it is a lesser element. I felt no reason to fear him as you should a villain. Saraj felt like he didn't need to be in the story at all his part was so anti-climactic that it could have been another character to have done the things he did.
The romance aspect was something else I had issue with. This story could have done without the romance; maybe show an unrequited interest as Ceony is still young, a crush not full on falling in love wishing he would kiss her or touch her shoulder. We already know Mg Thane is at least 10 years her senior and her teacher which makes his interest in her even more inappropriate (not that he's older but that he's her teacher). But despite the student teacher aspect there is no depth to the supposed romance, nothing that indicates these two are kindred spirits beyond Ceony consistently reflecting on a fortune she seen towards the end of the last book. Why should readers care whether or not these two end up together? Why shouldn't Ceony be transferred to another magician? These are things readers need to feel, answer, but the book does not do that.
One thing that didn't fit with the rest of the story was Ceony having a gun. When I read that I wondered "where the hell did that come from?" It doesn't fit with the world Holmberg is attempting to create. And the ending GAH it felt so elementary that it didn't make sense that these experienced magicians never thought to try it before. It throws everything we have learned about this world out the window, nothing matters anymore. Everything we learned about bonding to magic doesn't matter anymore because to reverse it is completely easy.
There are things I enjoyed such as the different magic and I would love to have seen more. I would have loved to have seen Ceony use more paper folding beyond what we already seen her use in the first book aside from the paper doll which I think could have been used in a bigger way. But the good does not outweigh the bad. If you like young adult that is very simplistic and your fantasy filled with romance attempt this series. I don't think I will continue with it.
For some other reviews, check out these blogs:
Kaona's Corner
The Fictional Reader
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