![]() Not having any of them really tied down in relationships was a good move. The ending was both satisfying, and sad, and I think that Novik did a great job leaving all these young adults open to the future. Also, the prophecy reveal was predictable but not in an upfront, first assumption kind of way – it was really well done. I felt that some of the sex stuff that happened in the book weren’t really natural to the characters (but I just might not subscribe to the use-sex-as-a-healing-distraction type of thing). The rest of the book explains a lot of questions we’ve had, highlights hints we missed along the way, and has some interesting events occur.Ī few of the things that are explain in the book were pretty obvious for me from what was going on in previous books, but to find out who the BBEG was and what kind of horrible thing that person did threw me for a loop, although it totally made sense once I knew who it was. The first part of the book is so sad and filled with pages of El lost in her own world as she (not really) tries to make sense of it all. This story picks up right where book 2 ends: El landing at her mother’s feet, finally free of the Scholomance, but her plan has gone wrong and try as she might, she cannot pull Orion through with her. ![]() The Golden Enclaves by Naomi Novik, Book 3 in The Scholomance trilogy. The big question: Was it satisfying and worth the wait? ![]()
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