Reviews

The Glittering Court by Richelle Mead

caroleolto's review against another edition

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4.0

4.5

blurrypetals's review against another edition

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1.0

DNF'd at the 4 hour mark in the audiobook, which is roughly 130 pages, if my math is right. I don't have a physical copy of the book to check, nor will I ever get a copy of it because this is one of the most underwhelming, disappointing, uninteresting, and absolutely sad excuses for a book I've seen in a long while.

And it's written by Richelle goddamn Mead! I love her! Hell, she broke my favorite fictional character's heart into a billion pieces and I still loved her! Her writing has always been so absolutely fun, funny, interesting, and altogether awesome since I started reading her books in 2008. But this...man, this just broke my heart. It sounded so promising. It even felt promising for a minute when I started the listen this morning. But by the time I took my lunch and Adelaide had a fake aunt show up courtesy of her secret boyfriend...I was just bored, sad, and disappointed. It just made Richelle look bad and I hate that. Write better stories, Richelle, because I know you can.

I would so much rather have a story that's heavy on big dumb fun and crazy awesome magic instead of a story that won't pick up, is dead set on being pretentious, and won't do a thing to make itself more interesting.

Screw this, I'm reading Passenger by Alexandra Bracken next so I can read something fun and worthwhile. Ugh.

enur's review against another edition

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3.0

Elizabeth hızla daha da fakirleşen bir kontes. Bilmem kaçıncı dereceden kuzeniyle mecburi bir evlilik sürecine girince işçilerin birçoğu çıkarılmaya başlanıyor ve bunlardan biri de kontesin hizmetçilerinden Adelaide. Ada, Cedric isimli bir işverenden Işıltı Sarayı'na katılmak için teklif alıyor. Işıltı Sarayı kadın nüfusunun az olduğu yeni dünyadaki zenginleriyle evlendirmek üzere eskiden dünyadan alt seviye kızları alıp eğiten bir kurum. Ada, yeni dünya düşüncesinden korkarken kontes bu fikre kapılıyor ve Adelaide olarak seyahate kendisi çıkıyor.

Kitapta pek çok farklı mekan kullanılıyor. Aslında dünyası tamamen Amerika'nın keşfi döneminde Avrupa. Önce kontesin ana vatanındaki yaşamı görüyoruz, sonra seyahate çıkılıyor ve eğitim alacakları ilk yere gidiliyor. Oradan gemi yolculuğu yapılıp yeni dünyaya geçiliyor ve orada da sosyeteye tanıtılıp eş arayışına giriyorlar. Serinin diğer kitapları Cedric'in getirdiği diğer kızlarla ilgili.

3 yıldız verirken hiç tereddüt etmedim. Okuması çok kolay kurgusuyla tam bir ortalama kitap.

acmoyer1's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.0

addisonkate's review against another edition

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challenging funny inspiring lighthearted relaxing slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.5

lyakimov's review against another edition

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2.0

I was fooled into thinking this book was about girls going to finishing school and at the same time they would be trained in assassin-like behavior or whatever. I was clearly so wrong because this book was such a bizarre and boring book with an incredibly disjointed plot. The plot barely existed in this book, and then swiveled suddenly into some new colonizer subplot in the last 100-130 pages of the book. Everything fell flat -- the romance, the "twists," the friendships between the characters. The romance was the epitome of insta-love and I felt absolutely NOTHING for the romance. I do like and respect the author trying her best to develop strong female friendships but the Bechdel test, unfortunately, was nowhere to be found.

eesh25's review against another edition

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3.0


3.5 Stars

I'm surprised to say that I actually liked this book. I didn't think I was going to because people kept comparing it to The Selection and because I'm not a Rachelle Meed fan.

It was an enjoyable read. It had a little drop in tempo but it picked back up about halfway through.

The characters were likable. I loved Mira the most.

The description weren't my favourite part but I can't call them pointless because Adelaide noticed stuff like that. It was about her character. Though, I did like how Adelaide got some chance to some down to earth. It just had to happen.

The romance was a bit too fast and the world building needs a lot of work but overall, I like this book more than I have any others by Richelle Meed so that's a plus. And the fact that this is basically a standalone. It was good.

For long review, click here.

melodykmtx's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional hopeful inspiring mysterious fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.0

yodamom's review against another edition

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2.0

I started this book as a young woman I finished old and wrinkled, it was that long and dull. I want my youth back ! I almost quit it so many times. I didn't, I held on because I knew she had some secret BOOM moment coming that would make all the nodding off and forced reading worth it. No, it was 400 pages of slow conversations, inner dialogs, dressing and hair, boring meetings and even more boring problems. i thought the last 40 pages were picking up. Gods that sounds so sad. Well I thought they were picking up but I was foolish again. It built up to a huge semi better than bland so obvious resolution. I know you're thinking, wow that sounds boring. YES it was ! 400 pages that could have easily fit into 75 pages and not missed a bit of the story. I never liked the spoiled Countess, the MC, never admired her stupid choices, or attitude.
What was the book about ? A rich Countess doesn't want to marry her cousin to save her class standing so she runs away and sells herself to a group that will train her to be an good upper class wife in the new world sold to the highest bidder. She decides not to follow those rules and fall fro another. Then she must lower herself even lower and do actual labor.
I will not read anymore in this series

theavidreaderandbibliophile's review against another edition

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3.0

The Glittering Court is the latest book by Richelle Mead. Countess of Rothford, Lady Witmore wants a different life. She is expected to marry someone with money and a title (especially since she has no money). That is not what she wants. Her grandmother, Lady Alice Witmore has arranged a marriage to a cousin, Lionel Belshire with an extremely dominating grandmother. The dominating grandmother, Lady Dorothy, states they cannot bring their staff with them. Lady Alice has arranged for Ada to get a position with The Glittering Court. It is an opportunity for young ladies (from the lower classes) to marry well in Adoria (a land that is similar to our Old West but with fancier clothes). Ada, though, does not wish to leave Osfrid (even if it is a great opportunity for her). Cedric Thorn, son of Charles Thorn (financial backer for The Glittering Court), is recruiting this year (he has his reasons). Ada finally agrees and signs the contract. Then she regrets her decision. The Countess sees this as her opportunity to escape. She arranges for Ada to go away quietly and then takes her place (sneaks away from her family). The girls are taken to a house in the country where they will be trained for their new life (how to run a household, proper dress, etiquette, dance lessons, etc.). The Countess has now become Adelaide Bailey (she prefer it to Ada). Cedric recognizes her immediately, but he reluctantly agrees to keep her secret. Cedric has his own secrets (he needs to escape from Osfrid as well). Adelaide, along with her new roommates and friends, Tamsin and Mira are in for an adventure as they head off for new lives in Adoria. Will it be all they hoped?

I love Richelle Mead’s previous novels and was eagerly anticipating The Glittering Court. Unfortunately, The Glittering Court is basically a romance novel (and not a good one) set in a different, old-fashioned world (with fancy clothes and carriages). I originally received a sneak peek, but then I read the whole book. It was alright, but I was not enthralled (not drawn in or engaged). I think Ms. Mead needs to go back to what she does well (paranormal novels). I give The Glittering Court 3 out of 5 stars. The book was just lacking. The idea that the Countess is running away to escape an arranged marriage, but she is going to a place where she will be sold to the highest bidder for marriage (unless she can pay back the money they spent on her training and clothing). The ending is expected. If I had read this book, I would have never picked up her other novels. If you are looking for a romance novel (and nothing else), then you will enjoy The Glittering Court. I probably would have loved this novel when I was a teenager (I read quite a few romance novels then).

I received a complimentary copy of The Glittering Court from NetGalley in exchange for an honest evaluation of the novel.