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A Court of Jealousy and Haters: ACOTAR chapter 33 or “The selflessness of twu wuv”

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As promised, I’m importing the A Court of Thorns and Roses recaps here from Patreon. These were originally written beginning in August of 2020, so there will be references to upcoming or seasonal events that won’t fit with our current timeline. I am not a time traveler and you’ll never be able to prove that I am. I will also include editors notes like this every now and then as we go, mostly to amuse myself but to give re-read value to those who’ve already been on this awful, awful journey with me.

Remember how long the last chapter was?

This chapter isn’t like that, so please don’t be too disappointed in the length of this recap. There’s nothing here to really recap, as you’ll see at the end, which I assume will be like five hundred words from now.

I might have been going to my death, but I wouldn’t arrive unarmed.

She’s got a bow and arrows and two daggers. For some reason, Maas is sure to explain that there are other weapons in the manor, but Feyre doesn’t know how to use them. Like, at this point, we know that she fights with a bow and arrows and daggers. No reader, at nearly seventy percent into the book, is going, “Why didn’t she take the mace?”

Better than nothing, even if I was up against faeries who’d been born knowing how to kill.

Now that some fairies have done something bad to someone she knows, Feyre is back to her hardline “all faeries are cold-blooded killers” stance from earlier in the book. Except, of course, for the nice, helpful fairies she knows.

You know. The ones who are “the good ones”?

I’m just saying, as someone who wrote a super racist fantasy series due to sheer ignorance of how my words looked outside of the lens of a white person? It’s really easy to make your book about warring races…racist.

Alis leads Feyre through the woods, sniffing the air to make sure they’re safe. It’s weird how the sniffing power didn’t come up for Alis until it was time to throw it in there to make the situations seem tense and scary. In fairness, we have seen pretty much every single other fae creature sniff Feyre or find Feyre by her smell, but I honestly just assumed that Feyre stinks.

Stay with the High Lord, the Suriel had said. Stay with him, fall in love with him, and all would be righted.

The Suriel never implied that Feyre should fall in love with him. Just that she should stay with him. But whatever, we’ll just go with it at this point.

They walk until nightfall.

I was beginning to wonder whether I should have brought more than a day’s worth of food when she stopped in the hollow between two hills.

Or the top of a mountain, or a municipal fish ladder, who can say at this point, the way geography has been handled so far?

The air was cold—far colder than the air at the top of the hill, and I shivered as my eyes fell upon a slender cave mouth. There was no way this was the entrance—not when that mural had painted Under the Mountain to be in the center of Prythian. It was weeks of travel away.

IDK, the manor was basically right up against the human world, so who’s to say if the mural means anything at all?

And what a fucking strange way to phrase that. “[…]that mural had painted Under the Mountain to be in the center of Prythian.” The mural didn’t paint anything. What was wrong with just saying, “Not when the mural had depicted Under the Mountain as the center of Prythian?”

Hey, just a quick question here… why did the mural depict Under the Mountain as a seat of huge importance at all, when it’s basically the military base of an opposing force? Why is that something Tamlin would have had commissioned at all? “Because Sarah needed to show us the exposition, dummy!” is not an answer I am accepting at this time.

All dark and miserable roads lead Under the Mountain,” Alis said so quietly that her voice was nothing more than the rustling of leaves.

I appreciate that Alis is a tree person and all the little tree-adjacent words Maas has used in conjunction with that. I would enjoy it a lot more if that had been sprinkled in consistently with Alis from the very beginning or even, idk, before chapter thirty-two, when Maas apparently remembered Alis is a tree person. But as I’ve mentioned before, I suspect Maas has no idea you can scroll up in a Word .docx to revise literally anything.

She pointed to the cave. “It’s an ancient shortcut—once considered sacred, but no more.”

This was the cave Lucien had ordered the Attor not to use that day.

I honestly looked back to make sure Tamlin mentioned the cave at all and it wasn’t just something Maas decided to throw in right now for the hell of it. Good news, it’s there.

But if the cave is how Amarantha is getting her evil faeries into the Spring Court…why not just brick it up?

I loved Tamlin, and I would go to the ends of the earth to make it right, to save him, but if Amarantha was worse than the Attor … if the Attor wasn’t the wickedest of her cronies … if even Tamlin had been scared of her …

Did you know … that using a bunch of ellipses … doesn’t make your story … more suspenseful? That it just makes you sound like you can’t breathe—like you can’t breathe … because you’re having an asthma attack?

IDK what is up with the formatting of this book with the space before and after the ellipses but it’s been bugging me for a while, now. And it’s not like it’s a font thing; I checked.

But all that aside, why am I supposed to be like, oh no, so scary, spooky spooky Attor? We never saw him do anything. We heard about how oh, he’ll definitely kill you, Feyre, but Tamlin and Lucien said that shit about every single other fairy creature. First, it was, oh, the Bogge is so dangerous, it would have killed you! Then, oh, be careful of the Suriel, the Suriel is the most dangerous thing ever! But wait, Naga! They’re so dangerous! And the Attor is the scariest of all, except for Rhysand, he’s really scary, but don’t forget Amarantha, etc.

You can’t make every single creature the scariest creature in the book, Sarah. That’s now how books work. It’s not how creatures work.

And again, I must ask, why is the Attor so scary? What has happened in the book so far that should have us frightened so badly? Because all he did was show up and shit talk Tamlin a minute and leave without a fight or anything. If we’d learned that the Attor, idk, is the one who took Lucien’s eye or ripped the wings off that fairy, or if the Attor put the head on the statue in the garden, he might be scary. At this point, he’s just a random being that showed up to build some kind of suspense and not actually reveal anything.

Oh, that’s right. We know the Attor is a scary thing because the author told us the Attor is a scary thing. Well, that clears it all up, no further demonstration is needed and how dare I question her.

Although, when I read that scene again for any clue that the Attor is somehow worse than, say, the Naga, who we saw be scary and strong and violent, he did mention that Amarantha was unhappy that Tamlin “dispatched” his men over the wall. Remember when in chapter thirty-two it was implied that Amarantha had to allow fairies to go over the wall? I do. I remember that.

Alis is like, yeah, bet you’re scared now, and Feyre is like, I’m gonna free Tamlin, and Alis is like, sure you are, anyway, hope you die quick.

“A few rules to remember, girl,” she said, and we both stared at the cave mouth. The darkness reeked from its maw to poison the fresh night air. “Don’t drink the wine—it’s not like what we had at the Solstice, and will do more harm than good. Don’t make deals with anyone unless your life depends on it—and even then, consider whether its worth it. And most of all: don’t trust a soul in there—not even your Tamlin. Your senses are your greatest enemies; they will be waiting to betray you.”

Ooh, see how she changed it up there? You thought she would go for an em dash and she hit you with a semi-colon.

Anyway. Flashforward to Feyre doing absolutely all that stuff in the next few chapters. I haven’t read them, but any time anyone tells Feyre, “Feyre, no,” she goes, “Feyre, yes,” and does it because she’s somehow figured out that they’re wrong and she knows better. I will be astonished if the next few chapters don’t have her guzzling down wine at a contract negotiation with a bizarro Tamlin who’s wearing an eyepatch and a black goatee. ed.—This is basically exactly what happens, but without the eyepatch and goatee.

Then Alis tells Feyre that by the way, those weapons are all shit, and oh, also?

“There was one part of the curse. One part we can’t tell you. Even now, my bones are crying out just for mentioning it […]

My bones are crying out at the fact that there’s yet another condition of this inexplicably detailed curse.

“[…] One part you have to figure out … on your own, one part she … she …” She swallowed loudly. “That she she still doesn’t want you to know, if I can’t say it,” she gasped out. “But keep—keep your ears open, girl. Listen to what you hear.”

The curse ended after forty-nine years. It’s over. Why is the magic still preventing Alis from talking about just one part of it? The curse is over. It’s finished, Tamlin lost.

Feyre thanks Alis for the help and Alis is like, sure, but you’re really gonna die, but good luck. And Feyre is like:

”Once you retrieve them, if you and your nephews need somewhere to flee,” I said, “cross the wall. Go to my family’s house.”

You told your family to flee, assjob. What’s she gonna do, tree-people her way into an empty palace and claim squatter’s rights? That sounds like it’ll go great.

Feyre goes into the cave and there’s a section break and she’s trying to inch her way through the cave in the dark. That’s right. Miss badass survivor? She doesn’t try to make a torch or anything. They’re in the woods with like, branches and tree sap but she just plunges into a dark cave without anything to light her way. But that’s okay because she sees light up ahead finally. But also…voices.

Hissing and braying, eloquent and guttural—a cacophony bursting the silence like a firecracker.

They have firecrackers in Feyre’s world.

So, they have gun powder.

But they all fight and hunt with swords and bows and arrows and shit.

Sure.

When the voices move on, she goes to investigate a crack in the wall, where the light is coming out, and she knows she has to go through it, even though she’s afraid, because she knows Tamlin is being held captive and she needs to find him.

And hopefully not run into anyone in the process. Killing animals and the naga had been one thing, but killing any others …

Please note: Feyre also killed a High Fae. But High Fae are different from Naga. But also, Naga are the only non-western European myths presented in this book so far, and they were described as having dark skin. And she’s fine with killing them, they’re in the same category for her as animals are.

I’m just pointing it out.

I took several deep breaths, bracing myself. It was the same as hunting. Only this time the animals were faeries. Faeries who could torture me endlessly—torture me until I begged for death. Torture me the way they tormented that Summer Court faerie whose wings had been ripped off.

The torture. The torture for Feyre.

Keep your chin up, Boo-berry. You don’t have wings for them to rip off, and you’re not immortal, so they can’t torture you endlessly. The way that this book is torturing me.

Feyre goes through the crack and gets into a hallway. This is kind of a Labyrinth thing, I guess, where if she had gone through the wall, she would have gone straight to the castle. I can think of a few fantasy books that could have used similar magic shortcuts, so I am not mad. I’m so glad that we don’t have to travel with Feyre for weeks.

So, she’s sneaking along this hallway.

This was a mistake––only an idiot would come here.

It’s not mean if I’m not the one saying it.

The thing is, Feyre is making the most foolish choice possible. She had an opportunity to go back and tell everyone in the human world that Amarantha is coming. She could have rounded up a bunch of fighters or something. Instead, she chooses what she knows is a suicide mission. Feyre has come here expecting to die. Not knowing that it’s a danger, just expecting to die and hoping she’ll get to tell Tamlin she loves him before that happens.

It’s not her fault, though:

Alis should have given me more information.

How could she possibly have given you more information, Feyre? The entire previous chapter was just her talking at you and telling you all the exposition that should have been in the book up until that point in one enormous lump.

Feyre does, however, note that she could have bothered to ask for that information or just not have gone on the journey in the first place.

She’s still creeping through the hallways, thinking about how she might need to wait to “gather information” about where Tamlin is and I’m so thankful she decides otherwise because I don’t want to read anymore fucking block paragraphs of “this is why things are the way they are.”

No. A second opportunity might not arise for a while. I had to act now.

Why? Because she’ll be too scared to try again, is her reasoning.

And then, something grabs her.

A pointed, leathery gray face came into view, and its silver fangs glistened as it smiled at me. “Hello,” it hissed. “What’s something like you doing here?”

I knew that voice. It still haunted my nightmares.

So it was all I could do to keep from screaming as its bat-like ears cocked, and I realized that I stood before the Attor.

Oh no, spooky Attor, who’s tied with the Suriel for having the least amount of times trying to kill Feyre. Good thing that’s used as a chapter hook, so we know it’s suspenseful.

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14 Comments

  1. Lena
    Lena

    “I shivered as my eyes fell upon a slender cave mouth”

    The horniest sentence in this book.

    I have absolutely zero recollection of the Attor. That’s how much of an impression Scariest Thing Ever XIII left upon me. But I know it’s evil because it’s unattractive!

    November 6, 2023
    |Reply
    • Mab
      Mab

      You are not alone. who is Attor? Was there really an Attor? I mean, clearly he’s… she’s… it’s (hold on, catches breath) a badguy because there was no mention of his hotness but where did he come from?

      This story has too many Evilest Evil that ever Eviled characters, all of which pose like 0 threat that I’ve seen. Oh well, at least this chap was shorter and not 100% one character telling another. Progress.

      November 6, 2023
      |Reply
      • Lena
        Lena

        My mad detective skills reveal that it was physically present once, briefly, back in Chapter 19, in which it traded “yo mama” jokes with Tam and Luc while Fayray eavesdropped from the bushes. It has since been MENTIONED several times as very bad, much scary.

        We were obviously so terrified by this masterful depiction of primordial evil, we gave ourselves selective amnesia as a coping mechanism.

        November 6, 2023
        |Reply
        • Dove
          Dove

          god I thought for some reason this was the shapeshifter that pretended to be her dad for some reason but I think that was the bogge. SHIT! This was the faerie from the garden that Feyre actually hid from and never mentioned again? fuck me

          Yeah I literally forget about these “villains” the second they disappear because Feyre sure as hell does. “haunted my nightmares” my blubbery ass. Some people don’t know how to make those engaging in fiction, and I assume Maas is one of those people, but for fuck sake THIS is what you didn’t get repetitious about?! The “monster” you planned on bringing back?

          the Attor is a cutie and I’ll think nothing else over this lack of sufficient build-up

          November 6, 2023
          |Reply
          • Dove
            Dove

            lol I just realized you said Attor WAS mentioned! We didn’t get to see Attor do anything interesting and Rhysand claimed the severed head so like… of course mentioning the leather-wings baby did nothing. There’s just nothing to recall, I guess?

            November 6, 2023
        • Mab
          Mab

          Now that you mention it, I vaguely remember some kind of you mama battle at some point. So this is that guy? Oh, yeah, his verbal repartee was terrifying.

          I blame the copious amounts of alcohol and mind altering drugs required to get through this book on my amnesia.

          November 6, 2023
          |Reply
    • Dove
      Dove

      I jumped to the comments first before going back and reading the recap. I legit thought Attor was just the acronym for this series when I first read your comment and it took me a minute to realize it was a character instead hahahaha

      then I had a mental breakdown during writing my own comment but I decided based on the ACTUAL description from the chapter hook that it’s a French Bulldog Gargoyle with a Snake Tongue and I felt a sense of relief.

      November 6, 2023
      |Reply
  2. Dove
    Dove

    I’m gonna be that jerk who questions why she didn’t take the mace because I’m imagining it’s a giant bludgeoning weapon which releases a vile magical effect that stings your opponent’s eyes and hampers their ability to fight back.

    |Better than nothing, even if I was up against faeries who’d been born knowing how to kill.

    I’m imagining they’re Australian brush-turkeys flying out of a steaming mound at hatching, squawking, “Well, EXCUSE me! How ELSE do you expect me to eat insects?!”

    And yeah the ease at which us crackers make racist fantasy wars is all too true. ah ha ha I’ve written plenty of accidental shit myself. 🙁

    |Alis leads Feyre through the woods, sniffing the air to make sure they’re safe. It’s weird how the sniffing power didn’t come up for Alis until it was time to throw it in there to make the situations seem tense and scary. In fairness, we have seen pretty much every single other fae creature sniff Feyre or find Feyre by her smell, but I honestly just assumed that Feyre stinks.

    lol I kinda forgot about this so maybe that’s why Alis gave her SO many bathes?! It wasn’t for Feyre’s benefit; it was for their comfort and it just never worked! They must’ve thought she got cursed by an evil faerie skunk.

    |Or the top of a mountain, or a municipal fish ladder, who can say at this point, the way geography has been handled so far?

    I choose to believe it’s the cleavage of a giant taking a nap, especially after Lena’s comment lol. From tits to thighs in a second would track in this damnable book! All she has to do is sit up even.

    But also yeah, Feyre, why the fuck DIDN’T you bring more food when you knew it was weeks of travel away?? OH because Alis looted the rest because she needs it to survive. Riiiight. god this book

    |Hey, just a quick question here… why did the mural depict Under the Mountain as a seat of huge importance at all, when it’s basically the military base of an opposing force? Why is that something Tamlin would have had commissioned at all?

    I assume Amarantha gifted it to him because she has a sense of humor.

    |But if the cave is how Amarantha is getting her evil faeries into the Spring Court…why not just brick it up?

    Silly, Jenny, bricks are for kids!

    |because you’re having an asthma attack?

    …wow. Okay, I’d actually like that better. The faeries whisk away some girl with asthma to the SPRING Court full of pollen and shit and she has to explain she needs medicine to breathe properly sometimes. Where’s THAT story?!

    |You can’t make every single creature the scariest creature in the book, Sarah. That’s not how books work. It’s not how creatures work.

    I think that’d be kind of funny though if how faeries DO work is they’re all just glamoured so that the next one you meet will ALWAYS be the scariest thing you’ve ever seen so there’s just a silly sequence where you almost have a panic attack any time you meet someone in a hallway and they wave at you or you go for a hike on a popular narrow path which turns into the greatest haunted house every time. And parties are terrifying at first but then you realize you’re just jamming out with hot baddies, cheeky brats, sneaky house cats, and good boys and girls until morning.

    You know it’s bad when every joke or comment is literally providing me more imaginative joy than anything in the book itself.

    |Ooh, see how she changed it up there? You thought she would go for an em dash and she hit you with a semi-colon.

    IT’S PRECIOUS AND RARE. *hugs it* Aw, you’re shaking! There, there, let me take you home little guy. I promise I’ll keep you safe from this book; never fear!

    |You told your family to flee, assjob. What’s she gonna do, tree-people her way into an empty palace and claim squatter’s rights? That sounds like it’ll go great.

    Let’s not be so hasty here. Maybe Nesta took the only mercenary capable of actually killing faeries with her. They could be fine as long as the Happy Tree Friends Cult finds them and helps take care of them while living in the palace because they have so many new recruits, they need to do something other than be shat upon by the randos in the crowd.

    |Please note: Feyre also killed a High Fae. But High Fae are different from Naga. But also, Naga are the only non-western European myths presented in this book so far, and they were described as having dark skin. And she’s fine with killing them, they’re in the same category for her as animals are.

    Ugggghhhhh yeeeah. It’s good to have these reminders but it’s so painful. Why the fuck weren’t they lindworms?? Because white privilege and also I blame Harry Potter. I’ve done bad shit like this too, I have… no good excuses for it alas.

    |Torture me the way they tormented that Summer Court faerie whose wings had been ripped off.

    WAIT WUT but he didn’t have a mask?!?!?!?!! I guess he wasn’t invited to that stupid party. But also THIS is why it would’ve been cooler if 1) Wingless Wonder had survived up to this point to go along as a second guide into the stupid mountain maybe (Alis sure as shit would never and more power to her) and 2) it’s really impossible for us as humans without wings to truly comprehend this, we have an automatic distance from this possibility. YES all vertebrate wings are essentially modified arms but you have to emphasize this to understand their suffering better. Because he had them ripped off and we know of the gardener servants having insect wings, this implies they’re more like THAT which adds further distance to our comprehension. You can still feel empathy for bug people but it just… either Maas did it purposefully, making him less human, so the reader doesn’t wince too much or she didn’t really think about this, much like everything else she’s trying to do in this horrible offense to fantasy.

    lol I was so outraged I only just after typing this realized you commented on that very thing with a witty joke, Jenny. I’m so sorry; you did it more eloquently than I did, but I’m like Maas, I’m not revising this before hitting send hahaha

    |How could she possibly have given you more information, Feyre? The entire previous chapter was just her talking at you and telling you all the exposition that should have been in the book up until that point in one enormous lump.

    *sobbing and hugging new pet semi-colon* It’s gonna be okay… it’s gonna be okay… It HAS to be okay; I need more sleep.

    *literally pauses to get more coffee* fuuuuuuck

    |A pointed, leathery gray face came into view, and its silver fangs glistened as it smiled at me. “Hello,” it hissed. “What’s something like you doing here?”

    | I knew that voice. It still haunted my nightmares.

    |So it was all I could do to keep from screaming as its bat-like ears cocked, and I realized that I stood before the Attor.

    Awwwwwwww! I’m just imagining the Attor tilting his head to one side like a confused French Bulldog; snake tongue flickering out intermittently instead of panting. That is the cutest way for him to greet her and frankly his words aren’t scary at all, nor is the hissing. He’s just that dog breed combined with a bat and a snake to make him AMAZING.

    I need this. It’s all I have in this world, aside from my new semi-colon. Forgive me if I’ve been using my good boi incorrectly. *pats hi-m on the head*

    November 6, 2023
    |Reply
    • Mab
      Mab

      I just looked up mace, to see what this complicated weapon was. It’s a big stick with a killy, beaty, stabby end to it. Why would anyone not bring that with them? If nothing else, just hurl it at the enemy. I mean, if I’m going up against the creature so horrifying that half the readership wipes it from their memories for fear of dying of fright, I’d bring every heavy/pointy thing I could carry. Is this the same dipshit who thought she could take down someone with a fork or something? IDK, I think for my own sanity I have erased most of this recap of this book from my memory. I just left the funny Jenny bits because that’s what I’m here for.

      November 6, 2023
      |Reply
      • Dove
        Dove

        YES exactly it’s such a simple weapon hahaha only a step up from a baseball bat maybe. I’m assuming this was part of Jenny’s joke, the ease of use. I just wanted to elaborate by adding in the modern form of the word as a deterrent to violence since we’ve had SO little magic and THAT could make it unique, more complex, and frankly useful as well as interesting. A fun twist if you will! I have to invent all this shit alongside Jenny’s and everyone else’s commentary to remember anything in this book myself. Ugh. Probably for the best it’s not hogging any brain cells in my smooth brain.

        I suspect Feyre only ever grabbed for knives because she’s a knife collector but like… wouldn’t surprise me to have blocked out a fork incident as too OOC lol

        November 6, 2023
        |Reply
  3. Dove
    Dove

    |So it was all I could do to keep from screaming as its bat-like ears cocked, and I realized that I stood before the Attor.

    I forgot to add but that “bat-like ears cocked” instead of “pricked” presents me with a smorgasbord of options:

    Did the Attor’s ears cock because

    A) tilt to one side because they heard something else coming towards them
    B) get flattened back because the Attor expected a scream
    C) turn into two adorable gray roosters attached to the head of a French Bulldog
    D) lift up the ears like they are a dog’s leg in order to twin-stream piss on Feyre

    I’m filling in A but my heart longs for C. (I’d choose D but only if her mouth was open to soundlessly scream and she had to taste it because I’m evil.)

    Let’s find out next chapter! ^_~

    November 6, 2023
    |Reply
    • Dove
      Dove

      fuck I wish I could edit my post because that should be “Did the Attor’s ears cock in order to”

      In my defense, I’ve had 3 hours of sleep at best. I don’t know what the author’s excuse is.

      November 6, 2023
      |Reply
  4. Dove
    Dove

    ahh shit also the 1 and 2 thing in my previous giant comment doesn’t make sense hahaha. I meant to say in 2 “she explained how they’re similar to arms” and my tiredness kinda jumbled my thoughts but they got across kinda.

    Did Maas write everything on next to no sleep? Hmm. Doesn’t excuse anything; I’m just wondering. The poor editors should’ve been allowed to really push her into revising the hell out of this first draft once she was rested but after her stupid Cinderella stuff doing so well, I’m assuming that at best they could leave comments that she deigned to drop a hot reply to and sprinkle in a little bit of backwards compatibility with prior writing but not enough to make her sweat about rewriting large chunks of text.

    Alternatively, she did her best and her best was never going to be good enough. I want to remind everyone about this from Wikipedia right now.

    In 2008, Maas graduated magna cum laude from Hamilton College in Clinton, Oneida County, New York, where she majored in creative writing and minored in religious studies.[7]

    The number goes to an archived version of her About Me page because professionalism has stripped it bare now which is understandable but I find the old one fascinating lol. Here are some excerpts:

    |The Quick and Dirty:

    |I’m a 25 year-old YA fantasy author living in the desert in Southern California. My debut novel, Queen of Glass, will be published by Bloomsbury Children’s in Fall 2012.

    |I was born/raised in Manhattan, but traded freezing winters and sweltering summers for No Winter Ever Weather when I followed my then-boyfriend (now husband!) out to California in 2008. I graduated Magna Cum Laude from Hamilton College with a degree in Creative Writing, and a minor in Religious Studies. I’m represented by Tamar Rydzinski of the Laura Dail Literary Agency.

    I think this means she met him in college and he went back home to California or else he got a job out there. IDK. But I weep that Throne of Glass is under a kid’s label lol I know YA is teen and up but still.

    |The Long & Even Dirtier:

    |I was raised on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, where I grew up roving the halls of the Natural History Museum, wandering through the Temple of Dendur the Met, and spending summer evenings at the Metropolitan Opera House, watching the American Ballet Theatre perform. When my parents weren’t ushering me from one New York City delight to the next, they were reading me fairy-tales and folklore from around the world. From “Cinderella” to “Vasilisa The Brave,” from “East Of the Sun, West of the Moon” to “The Terrible Nung Gwama,” my parents left no legend untold. Honestly, it’s not all that surprising that I now make my living writing mostly fairy-tale retellings about kick-butt heroines.

    |I’ve been a “teller of tall tales” since I can remember (I think my parents preferred that term to “extravagant and unnervingly good liar”), and began writing my first (serious) novel at sixteen. It started out as this re-imagining of “Cinderella” (basically: what if Cinderella was an assassin, and went to the ball not to dance with the prince, but to kill him?) and quickly became Queen of Glass, a sprawling epic fantasy series with very few Cinderella elements.

    OOOH! So you’re a lying liar who tells lies, Maas. And you’re proud of this. Uh huh. Well, she’s not as proud now but I’m assuming some PR firm handles her website these days based on seeing it for myself. That’s not a complaint; simply an observation.

    She’s probably exaggerating for “I’m so creative” bragging rights but I believe you when you tell me who you are, Maas. I believe you.

    I’m skipping around a little bit now:
    |Many extensive rewrites and revisions later, I sold Queen of Glass to Bloomsbury Children’s in early 2010, and it will release in Fall 2012.

    |Publishing takes a while. So during my hunt to get an agent, then the quest to find a publisher, then the long journey from sold manuscript to published/real novel, I wrote a few other books:

    |A Faraway Land, an adult fantasy that re-examines the legends of fairy godmothers; Hades, a YA fantasy that re-imagines Greek mythology; and A Court of Thorns and Roses, a YA trilogy that blends together and retells the tales of “Beauty and the Beast” “East of the Sun, West of The Moon,” and “Tam-Lin.”

    Remember how Maas said she’s an excellent liar? I’m assuming a lot but Maas might have revised as much as she could, if I’m being unbelievably generous here, which felt like a hell of a lot to her (although I wouldn’t be surprised if as shitty as her first Throne of Glass book is she managed to edit that more than this stupid fairy-ass-eating book) but quite frankly Lani Sarem did a better job of editing her modern fantasy, in hindsight. Then again, I’m shocked the limbo bar has sunk this low. I truly am.

    I say this without going back to Jenny’s recaps of Sarem’s book (or recalling the name rn lol) and knowing that’s still a turd sandwich too. She had a terrible MC as well, plenty of confusing or awful elements, and I can’t believe I’m about say this because I won’t condone what Sarem did even now, but she had a reason to be pissed off that she was sloppy enough to get caught when Maas is one of the NYT #1 bestselling authors bwaha ahaha.

    Also doing a re-imagining of Hades tracks. Lore Olympus is the most popular and one of the shittiest versions but lots of people have made web comics and I’m positive a ton of novels exist like that too.

    |When I’m not writing, I can usually be found watching an ungodly amount of TV shows, following ballet the way people follow sports, and guzzling down coffee and carbs. Though I’m now a full-time writer, I still get bossed around by my dachshund-terrier-pug-black lab mix, Annabel Lee (who is sitting in my lap, demanding that I pay attention to her as I write this). My husband and I met the first day of my freshman year of college (he was a junior…and my RA), we got married in May 2010, and we’ve been living happily ever after since (…but I swear we’re not one of those cutesy couples).

    |I’m also prone to gushing about things like Hayao Miyazaki films, make up and nail polish, Ancient Aliens theories, fantastic books (some of them are listed on the sidebar of my blog), Star Wars, Lord of the Rings, Indiana Jones, random anime, Disney (My favorite Disney film? The Little Mermaid. Or Sleeping Beauty. Or Beauty and the Beast. Tough call.), and illustrations by Trina Schart Hyman.

    Oh shit, this is the day I realize that Annabel Lee is an Edgar Allen Poe reference or I’m reminded of that, if I found out before, hahahaha.

    Ancient Aliens theories and Indiana Jones; well I’m assuming she loved the Crystal Skull!

    I’m amused she links to Trina Schart Hyman’s wikipedia page because apparently this was happening at the time:

    |Imagine a World
    Without Free Knowledge

    |For over a decade, we have spent millions of hours building the largest encyclopedia in human history. Right now, the U.S. Congress is considering legislation that could fatally damage the free and open Internet. For 24 hours, to raise awareness, we are blacking out Wikipedia. Learn more.

    |Contact your representatives.
    |Your ZIP code:

    I assume either that or willful ignorance is why she didn’t notice this.

    |In 1963, the couple’s daughter, Katrin Tchana (née Hyman), was born, but in 1968, they divorced, and Trina and Katrin moved to Lyme, New Hampshire. Trina lived for some time with children’s writer and editor Barbara Rogasky (with whom she collaborated on several projects). For about the last decade of her life, her romantic partner was teacher Jean K. Aull.[3] She was the first art director of Cricket Magazine, from 1973 to 1979, and contributed illustrations regularly until her death.

    Or maybe she did see it and she knows but Maas isn’t bigoted. That’d be great if so. I won’t hold my breath but it’s nice to think it could be possible.

    Hahaha sorry I shouldn’t like… ya know assume so much about a woman I don’t know, have never met, probably will never meet, and can’t read the mind of. But all of that was at least interesting to me so I shared it. I would’ve linked instead but I’m lazy and I wanted to comment on some of it.

    If this is untoward then I fully accept the mods/Jenny deleting my post. I can be a real asshat sometimes.

    November 6, 2023
    |Reply
  5. ShifterCat
    ShifterCat

    “All dark and miserable roads lead Under the Mountain…”

    This is something else that would have been cool to establish many chapters ago: the concept that the geography in Faerie is highly mutable and to get where you want to go depends on vibes more than maps. It could have explained why they put Feyre to sleep until they got to their destinations, and why the terrain around Tamlin’s castle seemed so inconsistent.

    “They have firecrackers in Feyre’s world. So, they have gun powder. But they all fight and hunt with swords and bows and arrows and shit.”

    Ehh, this one I’ll give her. ISTR China used gunpowder for years before developing rudimentary firearms. It’s conceivable that rich people in lazy-paracosm-Europe might have imported fireworks for special occasions, but not put it together that you could propel a metal ball down a tube using the same stuff.

    November 12, 2023
    |Reply

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