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[TRZ]⋙ PDF Gratis An Inheritance of Ashes Leah Bobet Books

An Inheritance of Ashes Leah Bobet Books



Download As PDF : An Inheritance of Ashes Leah Bobet Books

Download PDF An Inheritance of Ashes Leah Bobet Books


An Inheritance of Ashes Leah Bobet Books

In a postapocalyptic rural northlands (Alberta, maybe, or North Dakota), sixteen-year-old Hallie and her pregnant older sister Marthe struggle to run the farm that their abusive father left them. Winter's coming on, and the two of them have given up hope that Marthe's husband Thom will be among the straggling soldiers returning home from the war with the Wicked God Southward. That war's over now. The Twisted Ones--monsters that appear out of nowhere and kill with their acid touch--have vanished, along with their god, back into the neverwhere they came from.

So why has a Twisted One just fallen against Hallie's farmhouse window? And does she dare trust the half-starved veteran who begs for shelter at the farm?

There's a story here of war and monsters, but more important is the story that goes along with it, of families and wounds, failure of trust, misunderstandings, hidden suffering ... but also friendship, love in all its flavors, redemption, and profound healing.

I loved Hallie--all her angles and anxieties, her rages and her hurts, but also her bravery and her kindness. She's an excellent protagonist. I also loved all the supporting characters--and I mean all of them. There was no one who appeared in the story who didn't give the impression of a whole, complete person--you could imagine stories for every one of them. Hallie and Marthe have a complicated, painful family history but their world, rural and isolated as it is, isn't only their family: there are neighbors, there's the town. This world is rich and broad.

Tension builds: there's the threat from the monsters; there's the threat from wandering regiments, who are searching for the missing hero of the war; there's the threat from the mayor of the town, who doesn't believe two young women can manage a whole farm alone.

Against these threats are our characters, armed with compassion, common sense, and doggedness. Sometimes they make bad decisions or things go wrong, but they keep trying. I couldn't put the book down, and the last parts moved me to tears. No one's completely beyond the pale, no one is abandoned--that message spoke to me at a deep level.

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An Inheritance of Ashes Leah Bobet Books Reviews


MAY CONTAIN SPOILERS

This was an interesting book, and one of the rare standalone books I have read in awhile. This story takes place in a very bleak and grey world, one where devastation has already rolled through like thunder and left communities of struggling farmers behind. This isn't a land with prospering farms and girls in plaid and pigtails (well, there is plaid supposedly). This is the story of Hallie and her older sister, Marthe, as they struggle to maintain a massive farm on their own. Oh and they are doing it in the wake of a war with a twisted god that allowed "Twisted Things" into their world, burning and rusting all the things they touch before they die. Where do these creepy, mysterious beasts come from? Holes in the sky, obviously but I'll get more into that later. Despite this book's bleak exterior and moody lead characters, I really enjoyed the world building, the imagery and prose, and the conflict the two sisters share.

I wasn't kidding about the bleak and dreary setting of this book. Everything about it from the world to it's main characters feels grey and on the cusp of dying and sometimes that's ok. If you don't like books that are generally a bit more melancholy, this one is going to bum you out for sure, but the writing is full of beautiful prose and as someone who does like stories a bit more bittersweet at times, this was a breath of fresh air to me.

Hallie's world is an interesting one... something happened that caused the great machines to stop working. Holes appear in the sky where monsters that look like crossbreeds between crows and spiders etc. pour through the holes, burning and rusting anything they touch. An army marched to put an end to the evil god and few make the return journey home. Hallie and Marthe maintain their farm and hope that Marthe's husband will make his way home in time to see his daughter born. All the while these sisters struggle to maintain their farm, a rift blooming between them as they struggle to understand one another following such a loss. Their sibling squabbles are put on hold as, through a series of coincidences, a mysterious stranger offers to help them maintain the farm, Marthe thinks she sees the ghost of her husband stalking the land, and Hallie begins to fall for the boy next door who was left crippled by the door. Oh, and then the sky begins to tear open and countless Twisted Things fall from the sky right on their farm, threatening to destroy everything these sisters worked so hard to keep after their father died.

My biggest issue with this book is mainly that the author made such a complex world and, because this was a standalone story, never really explored it. I wanted to know more about this evil god and what these Twisted Things were. I wanted to know what happened to make the machines stop working and what they all plan to do about this other world that bleeds into theirs. This is a world rich for the exploring but... there is no more exploring to be done. Just felt a bit like a waste to me.

There were other issues that kept me from giving the book a higher rating as well. The author liked to overuse italics for emphasizing words. It's a good tactic to let the reader know someone is really serious about something. But when every character does it in almost every piece of dialogue it loses its impact. And realistically, no one talks like that where every word is just so important that you need to italicize all the things. If it was just one character who did that as just their speech pattern then ok, I give it a pass. But when everyone does it, it becomes so obvious that it takes me out of the moment and gets annoying. Outside of that, at times I grew frustrated with Hallie and Marthe's squabbling. I have an older sister and we are about the same age difference as Hallie and Marthe and the kinds of issues they had... I know everyone is different but it just got to a point where you wanted both of them to get over themselves. They do, but not till the end so the pay off is very slow.

Other than that the imagery that the author uses, the prose, the feelings... they are melancholy and bittersweet but beautiful. If you are in the mood for something a little dark, a little creepy but not scary, this is a great and quick read!
I'm not a fan of dystopian novels because I find they're often unrealistic or depressing. This novel was neither. I had a little trouble imagining the world of Marthe and her sister Hallie at first. We jump straight into the story so fast, there's no time to wrap your head around where we are or what's happened, and yet the characters were so real, I wanted to keep reading, to learn more. The two sisters have a strained relationship. They been through so much, it colors ALL of their relationships. The girls are broken, but as the story infolds, we see the girls grow and develop. I really liked that. The other characters in this story also grow and developed. There's a lot of facets to this tale. No clichés.

A great story for adults and YA readers, 15 years or older. No sex. Mild language. Strong messages about family, love, and coming of age.
In a postapocalyptic rural northlands (Alberta, maybe, or North Dakota), sixteen-year-old Hallie and her pregnant older sister Marthe struggle to run the farm that their abusive father left them. Winter's coming on, and the two of them have given up hope that Marthe's husband Thom will be among the straggling soldiers returning home from the war with the Wicked God Southward. That war's over now. The Twisted Ones--monsters that appear out of nowhere and kill with their acid touch--have vanished, along with their god, back into the neverwhere they came from.

So why has a Twisted One just fallen against Hallie's farmhouse window? And does she dare trust the half-starved veteran who begs for shelter at the farm?

There's a story here of war and monsters, but more important is the story that goes along with it, of families and wounds, failure of trust, misunderstandings, hidden suffering ... but also friendship, love in all its flavors, redemption, and profound healing.

I loved Hallie--all her angles and anxieties, her rages and her hurts, but also her bravery and her kindness. She's an excellent protagonist. I also loved all the supporting characters--and I mean all of them. There was no one who appeared in the story who didn't give the impression of a whole, complete person--you could imagine stories for every one of them. Hallie and Marthe have a complicated, painful family history but their world, rural and isolated as it is, isn't only their family there are neighbors, there's the town. This world is rich and broad.

Tension builds there's the threat from the monsters; there's the threat from wandering regiments, who are searching for the missing hero of the war; there's the threat from the mayor of the town, who doesn't believe two young women can manage a whole farm alone.

Against these threats are our characters, armed with compassion, common sense, and doggedness. Sometimes they make bad decisions or things go wrong, but they keep trying. I couldn't put the book down, and the last parts moved me to tears. No one's completely beyond the pale, no one is abandoned--that message spoke to me at a deep level.
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