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In Ashes Lie - Marie Brennan
In Ashes Lie
by: (author)
3.78 45
The year is 1666. The King and Parliament vie for power, fighting one another with politics and armies alike. Below, the faerie court has enemies of its own. The old ways are breaking down, and no one knows what will rise in their place. But now, a greater threat has come, one that could... show more
The year is 1666. The King and Parliament vie for power, fighting one another with politics and armies alike. Below, the faerie court has enemies of its own. The old ways are breaking down, and no one knows what will rise in their place. But now, a greater threat has come, one that could destroy everything. In the house of a sleeping baker, a spark leaps free of the oven -- and ignites a blaze that will burn London to the ground. While the humans struggle to halt the conflagration that is devouring the city street by street, the fae pit themselves against a less tangible foe: the spirit of the fire itself, powerful enough to annihilate everything in its path. Mortal and fae will have to lay aside the differences that divide them, and fight together for the survival of London itself . . .
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Format: paperback
ISBN: 9780316020329 (031602032X)
ASIN: 031602032X
Publisher: Orbit
Pages no: 433
Edition language: English
Series: Onyx Court (#2)
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Community Reviews
Foggygirl
Foggygirl rated it
5.0 Excellent read
Once I find an author that I love I tend to read any and all of their books that are available and Marie Brennan is one such author. An excellent second installment in the series and I very much look forward to reading the third book.
ambyr
ambyr rated it
2.0 In Ashes Lie
There was, I think, a pretty good 300 page book buried in here somewhere. I enjoyed the historical fiction sections, although I'm not sure trying to throw the rise and fall of King Charles, the plague, and the Great Fire of London all into one book was a good idea. Unfortunately, the faerie sections...
Confessions of a Bibliophile
Confessions of a Bibliophile rated it
4.0
While Midnight Never Come was very much a “talky” book—a lot of the action and tension came from the dialogue and backstory—the follow-up was a much more action-packed and exciting read. While the sections switching off between the Protestant Revolution and the Great Fire of 1666 are a bit jarring a...
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