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Produktbild: Rites of the Starling. International Limited Edition
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Rites of the Starling. International Limited Edition Shield of Sparrows

Aus der Reihe Shield of Sparrows
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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Verkaufsrang

6137

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

07.04.2026

Verlag

Penguin Books Ltd

Seitenzahl

592

Maße (L/B/H)

24/15,8/5,4 cm

Gewicht

850 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-911750-27-7

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Verkaufsrang

6137

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

07.04.2026

Verlag

Penguin Books Ltd

Seitenzahl

592

Maße (L/B/H)

24/15,8/5,4 cm

Gewicht

850 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-911750-27-7

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

Kundinnen und Kunden meinen

7 Bewertungen

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unfortunately, it was an even slower read than the previous book

Bewertung am 07.04.2026

Bewertungsnummer: 3101718

Bewertet: Buch (Gebundene Ausgabe)

I got to read this one before its official release date. My expectations were already low, but I'm still disappointed. After the first book only started to get somewhat interesting at around the 75% mark, I thought I was prepared for what this sequel would be like. Unfortunately, Rites of the Starling was somehow even more boring, and that’s despite introducing another female protagonist. Just like in the first book, Odessa is simply... there. She exists, but she doesn’t really do anything. She has no impact, and no presence that makes her feel like an actual driving force in the story. She’s just carried along by the plot. Caspia is definitely more active than Odessa, which at least gave this book some movement. But even then, I couldn’t fully get behind her either. Like Odessa, she ends up practically at the feet of a man who either lied to her or deliberately kept major things from her. And I’m sorry, but that’s just not my idea of a strong female main character. I kept waiting for either of them to truly stand up, take control, or make me root for them, and it just never happened. One of the few stronger aspects of this book was the worldbuilding, even if it takes its sweet time to unfold. The only part that genuinely held my interest was the different perception of the crux/swift, and how they are viewed so differently depending on the continent: peaceful on one side, cruel on the other. That contrast had actual potential and was pretty much the only consistently interesting element in the entire book. But once again, just like in book one, the monsters show up, wave at the camera, and then disappear again. They’re supposed to feel threatening, mysterious, or significant, but instead they just feel like props the story occasionally drags in to remind you that this is technically fantasy. And don’t even get me started on the constant visions. They were so repetitive and honestly just irritating after a while. Instead of building suspense naturally or letting the story unfold in a compelling way, the book keeps relying on vague, dramatic flashes to force intrigue. Show, don’t tell seems to be a completely foreign concept here. The two storylines - Odessa’s and Caspia’s - are connected, and I assume the reveal was meant to land as some kind of twist. The problem is: it’s way too obvious. I saw it coming from a mile away, so when it was finally revealed, it had absolutely no impact. They’re both white girls with curly red hair and weird eyes. Couldn't be more obvious. If your “twist” is the one thing readers are expected to piece together early on, then at least the execution has to be strong enough to still make it satisfying. This wasn’t. The ending did get a little more emotional. But it was too little, too late. By that point, I had already spent the majority of the book feeling bored, detached, and mildly annoyed. Overall, this was an unbelievably dull read. Not frustrating in a dramatic way, not bad in an entertaining way, just painfully boring. This is where I’m ending the series, and after this, I have no interest in picking up anything else by this author. Rating: 2/5 ⭐️ Spice: 3/5 ️

unfortunately, it was an even slower read than the previous book

Bewertung am 07.04.2026
Bewertungsnummer: 3101718
Bewertet: Buch (Gebundene Ausgabe)

I got to read this one before its official release date. My expectations were already low, but I'm still disappointed. After the first book only started to get somewhat interesting at around the 75% mark, I thought I was prepared for what this sequel would be like. Unfortunately, Rites of the Starling was somehow even more boring, and that’s despite introducing another female protagonist. Just like in the first book, Odessa is simply... there. She exists, but she doesn’t really do anything. She has no impact, and no presence that makes her feel like an actual driving force in the story. She’s just carried along by the plot. Caspia is definitely more active than Odessa, which at least gave this book some movement. But even then, I couldn’t fully get behind her either. Like Odessa, she ends up practically at the feet of a man who either lied to her or deliberately kept major things from her. And I’m sorry, but that’s just not my idea of a strong female main character. I kept waiting for either of them to truly stand up, take control, or make me root for them, and it just never happened. One of the few stronger aspects of this book was the worldbuilding, even if it takes its sweet time to unfold. The only part that genuinely held my interest was the different perception of the crux/swift, and how they are viewed so differently depending on the continent: peaceful on one side, cruel on the other. That contrast had actual potential and was pretty much the only consistently interesting element in the entire book. But once again, just like in book one, the monsters show up, wave at the camera, and then disappear again. They’re supposed to feel threatening, mysterious, or significant, but instead they just feel like props the story occasionally drags in to remind you that this is technically fantasy. And don’t even get me started on the constant visions. They were so repetitive and honestly just irritating after a while. Instead of building suspense naturally or letting the story unfold in a compelling way, the book keeps relying on vague, dramatic flashes to force intrigue. Show, don’t tell seems to be a completely foreign concept here. The two storylines - Odessa’s and Caspia’s - are connected, and I assume the reveal was meant to land as some kind of twist. The problem is: it’s way too obvious. I saw it coming from a mile away, so when it was finally revealed, it had absolutely no impact. They’re both white girls with curly red hair and weird eyes. Couldn't be more obvious. If your “twist” is the one thing readers are expected to piece together early on, then at least the execution has to be strong enough to still make it satisfying. This wasn’t. The ending did get a little more emotional. But it was too little, too late. By that point, I had already spent the majority of the book feeling bored, detached, and mildly annoyed. Overall, this was an unbelievably dull read. Not frustrating in a dramatic way, not bad in an entertaining way, just painfully boring. This is where I’m ending the series, and after this, I have no interest in picking up anything else by this author. Rating: 2/5 ⭐️ Spice: 3/5 ️

So gute Reihe!!!

Bewertung am 10.05.2026

Bewertungsnummer: 3133820

Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)

Keine Worte für das Ende. Wie das alles so ineinander greift,… bis Nachts gelesen, theatralisch geheult. Großartig, wenn auch herzzerreißend. Die Dual POVs sind am Anfang zäh, weil man nicht invested ist, aber es lohnt sich 100000%

So gute Reihe!!!

Bewertung am 10.05.2026
Bewertungsnummer: 3133820
Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)

Keine Worte für das Ende. Wie das alles so ineinander greift,… bis Nachts gelesen, theatralisch geheult. Großartig, wenn auch herzzerreißend. Die Dual POVs sind am Anfang zäh, weil man nicht invested ist, aber es lohnt sich 100000%

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Rites of the Starling. International Limited Edition

von Devney Perry

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  • Produktbild: Rites of the Starling. International Limited Edition