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A Court of Thorns and Roses eBook Bundle: A 5 Book Bundle

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Description

Lose yourself in the seductive world of the Court of Thorns and Roses series by internationally bestselling author Sarah J. Maas with this five-ebook bundle. Passionate, violent, sexy and daring ... A true page-turner -USA TODAY on A Court of Thorns and Roses Feyre is a huntress. The skin of a wolf would bring enough gold to feed her sisters for a month. But the life of a magical creature comes at a steep price, and Feyre has just killed the wrong wolf ... Follow Feyre's journey into the dangerous, alluring world of the Fae, where she will lose her heart, face her demons, and learn what she is truly capable of. The world expands in A Court of Silver Flames with the story of Feyre's fiery sister, Nesta. This five-ebook bundle of the 1 New York Times bestselling series by Sarah J. Maas includes A Court of Thorns and Roses, A Court of Mist and Fury, A Court of Wings and Ruin, A Court of Frost and Starlight, and A Court of Silver Flames. Read more

Publisher ‏ : ‎ Bloomsbury Publishing; 1st edition (July 12, 2022)


Publication date ‏ : ‎ July 12, 2022


Language ‏ : ‎ English


File size ‏ : ‎ 21861 KB


Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled


Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported


Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled


X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled


Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled


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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Great fantasy series, not feminist literature.
If you like spicy romance novels and you like high fantasy novels, you will like this series. It is an adult series for adult themes and adult scenes, not just spice, but also gore/war/torture, and that is important to note. This series has its own magic system and mythologies, and is connected to other universes of the author including Crescent City and Throne of Glass but can be read on its own. I think it is a really good series. SPOILERS (not heavy spoilers but will talk about things which happen in the book in a general sense) for conversation about feminism/fascism/mental illness. Many people want a high fantasy series which is feminist in nature and the male love interests are feminist, this is not that kind of book. It definitely has feminist undertones and female empowerment undertones, it is written by a female author which historically high-fantasy books in a female lens have been shunned so I prefer to support female authors, but the love interest does many things which are not feminist. The male love interest in this book drugs her and dances inappropriately with her, and then claims there was no other way to make the villain think he didn’t care about the protagonist and put her in danger. That is pretty unbelievable, there are a million other options that do not include drugging someone in that situation. The male love interest “rescues” the protagonist and brings her to a place which only his friends and family, for hundreds of years of relational ties, are. This technically is a social isolation happening. This is apparent when 5 books later the love interest is not only still lying to the protagonist, but getting all the friends and family to lie for him about something that directly and drastically affects her life. She technically is supposed to be the same level of power that he is, but it is very clear that was a stunt to show symbolically how much he cared for her. Because if she truly had the same power as him then the friends and family would not have lied like that, the same way they would not have lied to him. The other thing about that is she was raised to her status without any well learned political or historical education of the people she is ruling, giving the male love interest good reason to be able to over-ride anything she put into place, and not giving her enough knowledge to truly do her job. What also goes along with this is that all education on those political historical topics will have to come through him or people whom he is employing/has these strong ties with. There is a race of people which the love interest rules over who are physically and sexually abusing females, and neglecting/abusing their male children to be warriors. The love interest claims to have put laws into place to prevent this, however, he does not enforce them. Similar to how he symbolically gave the protagonist a position of power, he seemed to have symbolically put a feminist law into place but then not follow through. It is claimed the abuse they are facing is culture, and to give the males more time to change, which is obviously untrue and harmful. “He will change” rhetoric harms women often. I think the way the fantasy race and issue of female violence was written was realistic, but I also think that realism is disturbing because of his unwillingness to be harsher in punishment towards males who are literally physically altering these females. It also is somewhat insinuated there is fascism going on because of his obsession with keeping one “good” city safe, and his distaste for the sexist race of warriors and the other city - which he oversees and is in charge of. It is almost like he believes their lives lost causes and something to be used to protect his favorite city and people, which is obviously harmful to the people who do not live in his favorite city because their ruler has abandoned them to harm in belief of culture. Again, this is a fantasy book, I do not believe this to reflect the authors beliefs on feminism or humanitarian efforts, but if you personally are looking for a high-fantasy book with a feminist love interest, this is probably not the one. Lastly, the last book has a topic of mental illness- specifically substance use issues. This book was so difficult to read as a researcher in psychology because of the abuse the protagonist faced and how she got better despite, in real life, this person would likely be far worse off. What I mean by this is the protagonist was unliked due to a disability she had in childhood, inadaptibility which is something that happens in children groomed to be married off (groomed meaning taught to be something very specific, particularly in a way of being sold to the highest bidder and marrying a wealthy male). Her sister took her meaning for life by marrying someone powerful and rich without any of the efforts and grooming which the protagonist faced in childhood, so all her trauma no longer had meaning and she no longer felt any reason to be alive. After this she developed an addiction to alcohol and began sexual risk taking behaviors. What her family did was ridicule and shame her but also enable her with money. Shame results in a cycle of wanting pleasure, so doing this was worsening her behavior. After the family got fed up with her wasting money, instead of setting boundaries and no longer buying alcohol, they threatened her life, took away her autonomy, verbally and emotionally abused her, isolated her, and then the person in charge of helping her developed a sexual relationship with her (which is supposed to be romantic but when she already struggled with risky sexual behaviors, this was taking advantage of her). On top it, a scene occurs where she essentially is noted as suicidal, and instead of helping her he continues to be short, rude, and mean to her and forced her to hike (???). And this was because she pointed out a lie which the whole family was keeping from her sister by her love interest, so the protagonist of this book was being punished for giving information which her sister had a right to know. It is just so incredibly hard to read. Of course, these people do not have psychology or mental wellness, however, I think the part I take most issue with is the unrealistic fact she gets better. Because this is a popular series I would also be concerned with people taking the idea that this sort of behavior towards someone mentally ill is romantic or okay in any way shape or form. This is fantasy, most people know that, but I feel compelled to state it anyway.

 Overall: I do like the books, I like the writing style, I even do not mind many of the character flaws and the big issues I mentioned occurring, it adds to moral/ethical calamity and makes you question who is the real villain or hero. But, I have seen people stating that this is a more feminist style high fantasy romance and I just wanted to point all the reasons I do not believe that to be the case. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 9, 2023 by Mickayla

  • This book will be forever etched on my heart!
This book has unlocked an entire genre of book that I never thought to enjoy. I fell in love with the characters and the world they live in. I am in awe of the vivid detail that is offered to create the dreamlike Velaris that I have spent so much of my free time dreaming and battling along side Feyre and Rhysand! I will forever be thankful that I read this book and that so much still awaits for me to read! Happy reading! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 20, 2025 by Kimberly Chacon

  • Fabulous series!
I started listening to the first book on audiobook (my first ever) at the end of October on my way to/from vacation. Got home and listened to more chapters on my way to/from work until I was informed I had reached the end of my allotted audiobook hours for the month (grrr) with only four chapters left of book one. I couldn't wait for my time to refill, so I purchased the paperback set here. I just finished book three, and cried a few times finishing it. So good. Some fantasy books go overboard on details and descriptions, leaving me confused - these are well written so that I can remember characters and what they represent in the story. Some romance books get redundant on the spicy stuff - these keep the instances intertwined well enough with the story to not get repetitive. The heat in these books is genuine and realistic - I'd say a mature mid-teen will have no problem with it. I'm amazed at how well the conflicts in the stories are spun - just when I think resolution is coming, the author has brilliant ways to add to it and keep me on my toes. I'm a picky reader, and tend to fall in love with characters for life. Not since my teens, when I discovered M. Lackey's Herald Mage series, have I felt THIS connected to characters. These may be labeled as suitable for young adults, but this 45 year old loved them! Well done. Well written. Well received. These will be re-read for years to come! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 16, 2024 by Jenny W.

  • Big fan!
I’ve seen all the rage about these books and after reading them I understand why. I love the story line and the characters. I’d say the plot was semi predictable but not enough for me to loose interested. If anything I breezed through books 1-3 in a matter of 1.5 months. It’s spicy but not too much. I first read Fourth Wing and thats a bit spicier in my opinion. It did get better in book 2 and 3. But the writing and description was great. I am a bit stuck on the last book but it’s still interesting and entertaining to read. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 10, 2025 by KT

  • AMAZING BOOK SERIES
ACOTAR is definitely one of my favorite series in existence. It has an amazing story and great character development. I will forewarn you though. The first book is definitely slower than the rest and you have to hold on for a bit. It definitely takes off more in the second book. Something to know about the author , is she tends to build the story through our the book at a steady pace, but then the last few chapters A LOT happens. So, much is thrown at you but it is captivating and always makes you want more. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 2, 2024 by Melody

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