retronsa.blogg.se

Holy Sister by Mark Lawrence
Holy Sister by Mark  Lawrence








Holy Sister by Mark Lawrence Holy Sister by Mark Lawrence

The timeline of Holy Sister covers two different periods - present day and three years prior, which immediately follows the events in Grey Sister. It seriously delights me every time having that refresher! Especially since the wait for this final book has seemingly felt like a decade. I adore how Mark Lawrence always provides a Story So Far for his books. There you have it! That's the TL DR version of this review. picture this: Me, curled up in a ball, rocking back and forth, sobbing about Nona and what an exceptional character she is. To fully grasp the level of feels Holy Sister gave me when I closed the final page after finishing the book. I'll probably (hopefully) say a lot without saying too much of anything! But mainly because I am just so fucking happy that this series exists! I truly love it so damn much! Often expressing the scope of your love is harder and I feel that may be the case with this review. The fact that it is the third and final book, for one. Well, goddamn: cries into the sleeves of my sweater: This is going to be a hard review to write because. There are the desperate cries for aid and there is the sobbing of the lost." There is the clash of weapons, most often on shields, for tight-packed conflict is an ugly, graceless thing and there are few parries made. But in between charge and counter-charge there is the screaming of those too wounded to hold their peace and not yet close enough to crossing the Path that they fall silent. When a thousand warriors charge, a roar precedes them and swallows up all other noise. "The sound of a battle can be described as a roar, and sometimes it truly is.










Holy Sister by Mark  Lawrence