![]() Which may or may have not lead me to the conclusion this was going to be gay, and that pleased me very much (Again, I was wrong, though the book does include LGBT+ characters AND I keep my hopes up for the next two books). Being honest, it might’ve had something to do with the fact that when I was halfway through the introductions, I realized two things: 1) This book was going to be about a sport 2) All of the main characters were men. ![]() In fact, the Foxhole Court is one of those books that I simply have no idea why I kept reading or why it had me so enthralled and glued to it page after page, but the matter of fact is it did. I did not look up the cover, I did not look up reviews or the summary, and I instead I got myself a digital version and began reading. My immediate thoughts went over to our lovable fox Lucien from the aforementioned series and the fact it had “Court” written on it. Maas’es A Court of Thorns and Roses and getting in return: Frequently asked questions “What is the Foxhole Court?”. To the point that fact is, I only found out about this book when googling J. Let’s get something super straight: I only read this book because of the name. Unlike Stiefvater’s The Raven Cycle, the prose is poor and non-existing, but it is what the book has to say that matter. This is also for those who don’t mind a book that’s average in its writting style at best, and instead is fully worth it because of its plot. This first book does not include a romantic subplot so those who are expecting that, at least in the first book, will find themselves disappointed. First and foremost, I apologize for doing two reviews of this type of “good but for a niche crowd” books back to back, but I find out and binge read this book yesterday-Ī book recommended for those who loved the Raven Cycle! Strongly character driven books with an assortment of original and complex characters taking the narrative along each character arc. Recommendation: This book is great but it is once more, not for everyone. Misfits in their society coming together to become one great, holy mess- with nothing in common with great passion for a sport and terrible pasts of crime coming to haunt them. This is the moment you stop being the rabbit.”Ī marvelous character exploration on a team composed of broken, angry people. ![]() Andrew didn't deserve that.“Remember this feeling. If he tried, would it still be the truth, or would he poison the words by saying them aloud? Would it be instinctive to twist it? He wouldn't risk it. He didn't know how to tell the truth now. Review 2: Favorite quote: "Something like this demanded complete honesty, and Neil had been lying since he was old enough to speak. (Review Note: These books are not mm romance. more my hope this third book will be just as OTT as the other two and allow this brilliantly misfit cast of characters their deserved moments of revenge and (hopefully) celebration.And I need Andrew. ![]() I've been punished lately by series finales that don't just fall flat, they fizzle like a dollar store firework that you stare at saying "Is that it?"Somehow I don't think the Foxhole Court will go quietly into the night. As of the writing off this review, the author is in the midst of finishing the third (and supposedly final) book. So our understanding of who Andrew is has come slowly and with extreme prejudice. Andrew.The unraveling of this character has been done masterfully. ![]() Far from itSo why do I need the third book now?Because. Review 1: Is it OTT (over the top)? Oh yeahIs it way more violent and twisted than I thought it would get? Fucking hell, yesIs it perfect? Nope. ![]()
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