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Quintana of Charyn: The Lumatere Chronicles
Quintana of Charyn The Lumatere Chronicles
Author: Melina Marchetta
The climactic conclusion of Printz Award winner Melina Marchetta?s epic fantasy trilogy! — Separated from the girl he loves and has sworn to protect, Froi and his companions travel through Charyn searching for Quintana and building an army that will secure her unborn child?s right to rule. While in the valley between two kingdoms, Quintana of Cha...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780763669300
ISBN-10: 076366930X
Publication Date: 5/27/2014
Pages: 528
Rating:
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0 stars, based on 0 rating
Publisher: Candlewick
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover, Audio CD
Members Wishing: 2
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

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skywriter319 avatar reviewed Quintana of Charyn: The Lumatere Chronicles on + 784 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
How do you follow up perfection? Its usually impossiblebut this is Melina Marchetta were talking about, and she can do anything she wants to when it comes to writing. Still, when she actually managed to write a second book in a trilogy that was so astoundingly amazing, it was going to be a hard one to follow up for sure. While QUINTANA OF CHARYN didnt do it for me as Froi of the Exiles did, it was still an overall satisfying ending to one of the most emotionally draining and ambitious YA fantasy series in recent publishing history.

QUINTANA OF CHARYN made me think for the first time in this series of why I like these characters when most of them can be so horrible, to themselves and to one another. Because in this installment, I think I was removed enough from their situations to be appalled at how they talked to and treated one another. If they were real, theyd be given restraining orders. Wed think they are off their rockers. Wed hiss in their faces about how they should be ashamed of themselves, about how saying youd be willing to destroy yourself and others out of your love for her is more scary than romantic. Marchettas characters often seem like theyre acting out a dangerous dramatization of romance, one that borders on mentally abusive.

So how come Marchetta gets away with writing arguably abusive characters that we (hopefully) intelligent readers support fiercely, when were the ones who skewer portrayals of abusive characters as love interests in YA fiction? I dont know. Ive been turning this over and over in my head ever since I finished reading, and I still havent figured out why Im okay with loving Froi, Quintana, Lucian, Isaboe, and the others, when in any other circumstance I wouldve condemned the sympathetic portrayal of such characters. Is it because I sympathize with their horrifying childhoods and feel that their experiences explain the way they interact with one another? (But the children of abusive upbringings can grow up to be positive role models.) Is it because they are good with no one except the few that they love with all their broken hearts? Possibly. Quite possibly that.

Reading what Ive written, this probably doesnt qualify as an actual review, more like my musings on my confusion over my feelings for the book. Stylistically and emotionally, QUINTANA was a lot like Froi of the Exiles for me: in the beginning I was frustrated with how unlikable so many of the characters were, and in the last hundred pages I was tearing up at every sentence on the page. While it didnt have that Punch for me as Froi did, its still Melina Marchetta. Its still the Lumatere Chronicles. It is so worth reading and falling for.
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