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Produktbild: Quicksilver (Deluxe Edition)
Band 1

Quicksilver (Deluxe Edition) The utterly addictive enemies-to-lovers romantasy sensation

Aus der Reihe The Fae & Alchemy Series
16

21,99 €

inkl. gesetzl. MwSt., zzgl. Versandkosten


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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Verkaufsrang

6066

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

19.08.2025

Verlag

Hodder And Stoughton

Seitenzahl

640

Maße (L/B/H)

24/16,5/4,8 cm

Gewicht

905 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-399-75128-5

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Verkaufsrang

6066

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

19.08.2025

Verlag

Hodder And Stoughton

Seitenzahl

640

Maße (L/B/H)

24/16,5/4,8 cm

Gewicht

905 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-399-75128-5

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

Kundinnen und Kunden meinen

16 Bewertungen

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dranzubleiben zahlt sich aus

Bewertung am 08.10.2025

Bewertungsnummer: 2619678

Bewertet: Buch (Gebundene Ausgabe)

Anfangs war ich mir nicht sicher, was ich von Quicksilver halten soll. Ich fand die Welt und den Grundkonflikt interessant und hatte direkt einen guten Draht zu Saeris. Allerdings fühlte sich die Geschichte im ersten Teil fast zu sehr nach Romantasy und den typischen Tropes an, sodass es sehr repititiv wirkte. Ein mürrischer, muskelbepackter MMC mit schwarzen Haare und Schattenkräften? Wie viele andere Namen fallen einem bei der Beschreibung da spontan ein ... Mit der Zeit hat mich die Geschichte aber in ihren Bann gezogen, was auch an den gut geschriebenen Nebencharakteren liegt. Quicksilver erfindet das Rad nicht neu, bedient die verwendeten Tropes aber gut. Obwohl viel Spannung zwischen den beiden Hauptfiguren in der Luft liegt, bleibt der Spice-Anteil im Verhältnis. Der Cliffhanger erwischt einen kalt und ich bin schon sehr gespannt, wie es weitergeht.

dranzubleiben zahlt sich aus

Bewertung am 08.10.2025
Bewertungsnummer: 2619678
Bewertet: Buch (Gebundene Ausgabe)

Anfangs war ich mir nicht sicher, was ich von Quicksilver halten soll. Ich fand die Welt und den Grundkonflikt interessant und hatte direkt einen guten Draht zu Saeris. Allerdings fühlte sich die Geschichte im ersten Teil fast zu sehr nach Romantasy und den typischen Tropes an, sodass es sehr repititiv wirkte. Ein mürrischer, muskelbepackter MMC mit schwarzen Haare und Schattenkräften? Wie viele andere Namen fallen einem bei der Beschreibung da spontan ein ... Mit der Zeit hat mich die Geschichte aber in ihren Bann gezogen, was auch an den gut geschriebenen Nebencharakteren liegt. Quicksilver erfindet das Rad nicht neu, bedient die verwendeten Tropes aber gut. Obwohl viel Spannung zwischen den beiden Hauptfiguren in der Luft liegt, bleibt der Spice-Anteil im Verhältnis. Der Cliffhanger erwischt einen kalt und ich bin schon sehr gespannt, wie es weitergeht.

Overhyped

Nadiya Z. (Mitglied der Thalia Book Circle Community) am 29.05.2026

Bewertungsnummer: 3152154

Bewertet: Buch (Gebundene Ausgabe)

I bought the deluxe edition of “Quicksilver” because of the massive BookTok hype and the gorgeous edition — and honestly, this is one of those cases where the packaging is stronger than the actual story. While reading, I constantly had a sense of déjà vu. It feels like the author took the most recognizable elements from “A Court of Thorns and Roses”, “The Witcher”, “Game of Thrones”, “Twilight”, and several other popular fantasy/romantasy series and blended them together. But instead of creating a truly original world and memorable characters, the result feels more like a collection of familiar tropes and scenes. What disappointed me most: underdeveloped characters; inconsistent or illogical character decisions; worldbuilding that often feels decorative rather than functional; a constant feeling that scenes were written for TikTok edits and viral quotes rather than for the actual story. Kingfisher especially feels like a mix of Rhysand, Geralt, Edward Cullen and the standard “dark mysterious morally grey male lead” archetype. Saeris also never fully feels like a real person — more like a compilation of popular romantasy heroine traits. The biggest issue for me was the lack of emotional depth and internal logic. Characters often behave in whatever way is necessary for the next dramatic or spicy moment instead of acting according to believable motivations or established personalities. Because of that, the books gradually started to feel artificial and heavily market-driven. The writing is easy to consume, some atmospheric moments are enjoyable, and the deluxe editions themselves are absolutely beautiful. But if you are looking for fantasy with strong worldbuilding, emotionally complex characters, and relationships that develop naturally, this series may end up being disappointing. For me, this book worked better as pretty collector’s edition for the shelf than as story that will genuinely stay with me afterward.

Overhyped

Nadiya Z. (Mitglied der Thalia Book Circle Community) am 29.05.2026
Bewertungsnummer: 3152154
Bewertet: Buch (Gebundene Ausgabe)

I bought the deluxe edition of “Quicksilver” because of the massive BookTok hype and the gorgeous edition — and honestly, this is one of those cases where the packaging is stronger than the actual story. While reading, I constantly had a sense of déjà vu. It feels like the author took the most recognizable elements from “A Court of Thorns and Roses”, “The Witcher”, “Game of Thrones”, “Twilight”, and several other popular fantasy/romantasy series and blended them together. But instead of creating a truly original world and memorable characters, the result feels more like a collection of familiar tropes and scenes. What disappointed me most: underdeveloped characters; inconsistent or illogical character decisions; worldbuilding that often feels decorative rather than functional; a constant feeling that scenes were written for TikTok edits and viral quotes rather than for the actual story. Kingfisher especially feels like a mix of Rhysand, Geralt, Edward Cullen and the standard “dark mysterious morally grey male lead” archetype. Saeris also never fully feels like a real person — more like a compilation of popular romantasy heroine traits. The biggest issue for me was the lack of emotional depth and internal logic. Characters often behave in whatever way is necessary for the next dramatic or spicy moment instead of acting according to believable motivations or established personalities. Because of that, the books gradually started to feel artificial and heavily market-driven. The writing is easy to consume, some atmospheric moments are enjoyable, and the deluxe editions themselves are absolutely beautiful. But if you are looking for fantasy with strong worldbuilding, emotionally complex characters, and relationships that develop naturally, this series may end up being disappointing. For me, this book worked better as pretty collector’s edition for the shelf than as story that will genuinely stay with me afterward.

Kundinnen und Kunden meinen

Quicksilver (Deluxe Edition)

von Callie Hart

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Meinung aus der Buchhandlung

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Lynn B.

Thalia Wien – Millennium City

Zum Portrait

4/5

Shockingly good

Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)

After heavy consideration (mainly because of the cover) I finally decided to give this book a try. It blew me away! I never expected to like this so much, especially because the plot kind of sounds like every other fae romantasy story out there. But what really drew me in from the beginning were the characterizations of the main cast. Even though some of them fell a bit flat, they still each felt alive and unique. Through that this book managed to create one of my favorite found families in this genre. Because of that I really enjoyed myself while reading and I can't wait for the second book to come out.
  • Lynn B.
  • Buchhändler/-in

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4/5

Shockingly good

Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)

After heavy consideration (mainly because of the cover) I finally decided to give this book a try. It blew me away! I never expected to like this so much, especially because the plot kind of sounds like every other fae romantasy story out there. But what really drew me in from the beginning were the characterizations of the main cast. Even though some of them fell a bit flat, they still each felt alive and unique. Through that this book managed to create one of my favorite found families in this genre. Because of that I really enjoyed myself while reading and I can't wait for the second book to come out.

Es ist ein Problem aufgetreten. Bitte laden Sie die Seite neu und versuchen es noch einmal.

Nesli

Thalia Wien – Westfield Donau Zentrum

Zum Portrait

2/5

“After much consideration, he said, "It looks like a Simon.”

Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)

Tropes: enemies to lovers, slow-burn, grumpy x grumpy, found family, big cliffhanger, shadow daddy, humans/faes/vampires/gods, single POV, fated mates -- I want to start my review with a little side note that may save you some time, so here we go. If you expect a review that praises the hell out of this book like every other review, then you should get the hell outta here because that’s not what’s gonna happen today. What you get today is me passionately ranting about this obsessively hyped book, which I gracefully managed to finish without throwing it out of the window or drowning it in my tears of disappointment. So let’s start with one of the most problematic things about this book. Kingfisher. (Maybe this one’s on me because I read a book where the MMC’s name is Kingfisher.) Anyways. I think that CH really wanted to create THE ultimate dark and brutally good-looking Shadow Daddy, aka Rhysand, High Lord of the Night Court (THE AUDACITY is UNBELIEVABLE), whose name and title ALONE send heavenly shivers down my spine. But I have zero regrets by telling you that, in my opinion, he isn’t ANY of that and just mentioned writer for sure did not succeed with her bland and boring, one-dimensional Rhysand copy. Tbh, I don’t even have much to say about him at this point. He’s getting on my nerves and doesn’t deserve the hype he’s getting, and not a single soul walking the surface of mother earth can convince me otherwise. The other not so problematic but still problematic thing is Saeris. I really tried to like Saeris, but I just couldn’t. She’s probably the most insufferable FMC that I have ever read about. The author wants you to believe that she’s a sassy, badass, sarcastic, strong, independent FMC, and I guess my thoughts on that are different from the mass populace. In reality, she was an unbearable, dumb, rude, whiny brat with a superiority complex. The only time I was able to connect with her was after her complete makeover, when she turned into a fae-vampire and wasn’t herself anymore. I hope she loses her mind (no big loss), forgets about Fisher (wholeheartedly denying his entire existence anyways) and falls in love with Tal (hot as hell). Honestly, that was when her character REALLY started getting interesting. AFTER 600 PAGES. You can’t even imagine what I went through to get there. And NOT EVEN THAT was her accomplishment. What made this book somehow readable for me were definitely the side characters like Carrion, HEIR to the Yvellian Throne- like what is happening (the timing and plotting were really bad and made no sense, *bigsurprise* but my man deserves it all no matter what), ARCHER, Ren, Lorreth and TALADAIUS (please do yourself a favor and check the fanart). Whenever this whole mess made me start questioning my obviously questionable tbr choices, these characters kept me going because the plot was LITERALLY all over the place. There were a lot of unexplainable plot holes and logical mistakes, and by a lot, I mean A LOT. Half of the plot didn’t make any sense, and the other half felt totally rushed and unfinished, just like the characters. Like, first going into this book, I thought that the FMC’s brother, Hayden, would be a bigger part of the plot seeing how the beginning went. However, this man was basically forgotten about 40% through the book, lmao. Saeris would go on and on and on about needing him, just to forget about him and completely change the motive. I hope this man is living his best life cause no one is thinking about him anyways. And I also think that writers should stop promoting everything as enemies-to-lovers and slow-burn because these two tropes lasted about 20 pages after the characters met, and that simply doesn’t fulfill the requirements for any of these elements. I feel like CH first desperately tried to make them enemies, like there was absolutely NO REASON for Saeris to hate Fisher with all her being (and you need more than a couple insults and lame **** jokes to be enemies if you ask me), and then again desperately tried to make them lovers, but the connection was just not there, and it all felt like a bunch of words without any meaning. And let’s be honest, smashing the best of other popular books together and turning it into a story won’t make it a good book. And it was even branded as the new ACOTAR and Fourth Wing like, are you kidding me? It’s hands down the worst book I’ve read this year. A trite nonsense trying to emulate better writers as a response to the growing popularity of romantasy. There is not a single original thought in this half-hearted attempt at riding the coattails of ACOTARs success. And yet, I will read the sequel, cause the ending was just interesting enough to give it another try and also my curiosity has a life of its own and I have zero self-control.
  • Nesli
  • Buchhändler/-in

Es ist ein Problem aufgetreten. Bitte laden Sie die Seite neu und versuchen es noch einmal.

2/5

“After much consideration, he said, "It looks like a Simon.”

Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)

Tropes: enemies to lovers, slow-burn, grumpy x grumpy, found family, big cliffhanger, shadow daddy, humans/faes/vampires/gods, single POV, fated mates -- I want to start my review with a little side note that may save you some time, so here we go. If you expect a review that praises the hell out of this book like every other review, then you should get the hell outta here because that’s not what’s gonna happen today. What you get today is me passionately ranting about this obsessively hyped book, which I gracefully managed to finish without throwing it out of the window or drowning it in my tears of disappointment. So let’s start with one of the most problematic things about this book. Kingfisher. (Maybe this one’s on me because I read a book where the MMC’s name is Kingfisher.) Anyways. I think that CH really wanted to create THE ultimate dark and brutally good-looking Shadow Daddy, aka Rhysand, High Lord of the Night Court (THE AUDACITY is UNBELIEVABLE), whose name and title ALONE send heavenly shivers down my spine. But I have zero regrets by telling you that, in my opinion, he isn’t ANY of that and just mentioned writer for sure did not succeed with her bland and boring, one-dimensional Rhysand copy. Tbh, I don’t even have much to say about him at this point. He’s getting on my nerves and doesn’t deserve the hype he’s getting, and not a single soul walking the surface of mother earth can convince me otherwise. The other not so problematic but still problematic thing is Saeris. I really tried to like Saeris, but I just couldn’t. She’s probably the most insufferable FMC that I have ever read about. The author wants you to believe that she’s a sassy, badass, sarcastic, strong, independent FMC, and I guess my thoughts on that are different from the mass populace. In reality, she was an unbearable, dumb, rude, whiny brat with a superiority complex. The only time I was able to connect with her was after her complete makeover, when she turned into a fae-vampire and wasn’t herself anymore. I hope she loses her mind (no big loss), forgets about Fisher (wholeheartedly denying his entire existence anyways) and falls in love with Tal (hot as hell). Honestly, that was when her character REALLY started getting interesting. AFTER 600 PAGES. You can’t even imagine what I went through to get there. And NOT EVEN THAT was her accomplishment. What made this book somehow readable for me were definitely the side characters like Carrion, HEIR to the Yvellian Throne- like what is happening (the timing and plotting were really bad and made no sense, *bigsurprise* but my man deserves it all no matter what), ARCHER, Ren, Lorreth and TALADAIUS (please do yourself a favor and check the fanart). Whenever this whole mess made me start questioning my obviously questionable tbr choices, these characters kept me going because the plot was LITERALLY all over the place. There were a lot of unexplainable plot holes and logical mistakes, and by a lot, I mean A LOT. Half of the plot didn’t make any sense, and the other half felt totally rushed and unfinished, just like the characters. Like, first going into this book, I thought that the FMC’s brother, Hayden, would be a bigger part of the plot seeing how the beginning went. However, this man was basically forgotten about 40% through the book, lmao. Saeris would go on and on and on about needing him, just to forget about him and completely change the motive. I hope this man is living his best life cause no one is thinking about him anyways. And I also think that writers should stop promoting everything as enemies-to-lovers and slow-burn because these two tropes lasted about 20 pages after the characters met, and that simply doesn’t fulfill the requirements for any of these elements. I feel like CH first desperately tried to make them enemies, like there was absolutely NO REASON for Saeris to hate Fisher with all her being (and you need more than a couple insults and lame **** jokes to be enemies if you ask me), and then again desperately tried to make them lovers, but the connection was just not there, and it all felt like a bunch of words without any meaning. And let’s be honest, smashing the best of other popular books together and turning it into a story won’t make it a good book. And it was even branded as the new ACOTAR and Fourth Wing like, are you kidding me? It’s hands down the worst book I’ve read this year. A trite nonsense trying to emulate better writers as a response to the growing popularity of romantasy. There is not a single original thought in this half-hearted attempt at riding the coattails of ACOTARs success. And yet, I will read the sequel, cause the ending was just interesting enough to give it another try and also my curiosity has a life of its own and I have zero self-control.

Meinung aus der Buchhandlung

Quicksilver

von Callie Hart

0 Rezensionen filtern

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  • Produktbild: Quicksilver (Deluxe Edition)