![]() Plus, I felt like I didn’t know enough about Alicia to know if this kind of attack would even be her MO. There was also the whole “scavenger hunt” thing to find Jill. And if art is supposed to imitate life, then the ends of these series should have been a little messier, that’s all. Kind of like how The Mortal Instruments ended. I just found ita little too unbelievable. Don’t get me wrong, I loved that they were all happy. The chances of all our heroes being happy are so, so slim. Life doesn’t actually get tied up in a happy little bow. I think the big thing for me was that the ending was too tied up. I want to say that I loved this book, but I didn’t. Maybe Mead and her publishers were banking on us ignoring the titles and thinking “Bloodlines”! automatically. The Bloodlines titles haven’t made sense since The Fiery Heart. Actually, come to think of it, Silver Shadows made no sense either. I was expecting a clandestine group of some kind, but no dice. There was not one mention of a “Ruby Circle”. And that world is gone now.įirst things first: I did not understand the title. Mead gave us vampires who were bloodthirsty magical creatures but who still seemed human enough for us to lust after. No more Sydney, Adrian, Moroi, Strogoi, Rose, Dimitri, or witches. ![]() It’s been days since I finished The Ruby Circle but I haven’t actually had the opportunity to sit down and write down what I thought of it. I finally have the time to say goodbye to Sydney and Adrian properly. ![]()
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