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The Sweet Far Thing (Gemma Doyle, #3) The Sweet Far Thing by Libba Bray


My rating: 2 of 5 stars
Conclusion to this young adult historical fantasy trilogy about the girl at the finishing school in 1896 with the magical powers and the alternate realms.

Meh. It would have been fine – well, I mean, too long and full of clichés and ridiculous historical anachronisms, but still cute and magic girls' finishing school pleasing – except.

Except it's all about a seventeen-year-old girl with nearly limitless magical power who does a series of appalling things. Like rearrange her relatives's personalities, alter their memories, oh and make boys kiss her (but it's okay, you know, because they clearly wanted to anyway). Things that a seventeen-year-old would do, but Bray doesn't actually seem to grasp just how disgusting her heroine's behavior is, and the vague 'growing up and learning better' arc is laughably shallow, with no real consequences or acknowledgement of wrongdoing. I would never recommend this book to a teenaged girl, is what I'm saying.

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In 1895, sixteen-year-old Gemma Doyle is sent from Bombay to a British finishing school upon the death of her mother. There she comes into her power as a member of the Order, a secret organization of women sorcerers who can access the Realms. Blah blah past tragedy blah mortal enemycakes.

Okay, let me tell you what I like about these books. It's not the plot (unobjectionable, but shaped exactly like you think it is, down to the predictable twists). And it's definitely not the characterization (laughably anachronistic where it's not historicized romantic). No, see, the awesome thing about these books are the girls. Teenage girls. Who are friends like teenaged girls, which means they love each other passionately and spend large chunks of the books hating each other. There are no easy stereotypes for the poor scholarship student – no shining virtue or storybook ending. And everyone revolves in this intricate pattern of resentment and jealousy and anger and fear and affection in this totally awesome way.

Actual teenage girls in a young adult novel! Huh!

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