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4,6 su 5 stelle
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A Court of Thorns and Roses

A Court of Thorns and Roses

daSarah J. Maas
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Clodia
4,0 su 5 stelleRATING: 4 - @clodiareads on IG
Recensito in Italia 🇮🇹 il 12 maggio 2019
WARNING: THIS REVIEW IS SPOILERY

I went into this book kinda expecting to read just another boring, trivial, YA fantasy. I'm happy - you can't even imagine how much - to say that it surprised me a lot, in a positive way.
I'm not giving it five stars for a few reasons: first of all, the Faerie world is becoming a little bit too mainstream in my opinion and I would love to read about new, more original worlds. Second, I hated the romance side of this book. HATED.
This book could've been perfect - I'm not kidding - if Sarah J. Maas didn't decide to add a spoon of 50 Shades of Grey in the mixture. Why, Sarah? WHY?
If you plan on reading it, expect a lot of focus on male bodies, especially muscles, they're everywhere, in every thought of the main character and they're the main reason behind the romance, which to me sucks. Anyway, let's start with a more detailed review.

Story:
The story is nice and interesting. Everything is well explained since the beginning and it doesn't sound forced or clichè - well, at least until the romance starts. I must say that it gets a bit boring when Fayre goes to live in Prythian: all those chapters in which she basically just walks around, discovers her new home, eavesdrops conversations and hates on Tamlin without a valid reason, after a while they get annoying. Luckily it's just a phase and the story goes back to being interesting when Tamlin forces her to leave Prythian. I liked the idea of the curse, the fact that no one could actually tell Fayre what was going on and that she had to figure it out all alone. The best part is - obviously - when she gets Under the Mountain and accepts to complete three tasks in order to free Tamlin from Amarantha's curse. It kinda reminded me of The Hunger Games, but in a very different way, and I absolutely loved it. There are two main things I truly appreciated in this book: the characters have so much depth and structure, their stories are long and detailed, almost all of them feel very three-dimensional, which isn't an obvious thing (cough cough The Cruel Prince cough cough). Their actions don't feel weird or out of nowhere, there's always a clear reason behind everything. Honestly, they feel so real. I also really enjoyed Sarah's writing style: she's clearly a tell writer, which means you shouldn't expect too many descriptions, beside the necessary ones. Is this a bad thing? Not at all, at least for me. She puts in her writing the necessary details you need to understand the world you're reading about and see with your imagination's eyes what she wants you to see, but at the same time she does not extend into long-winded descriptions that make you want to skip the paragraph and move on. The only thing I have to criticize - and it's a very bad one for me - is, as I previously said, this feeling of 50 Shades wannabe. Tamlin's muscles are the main focus of Fayre’s thoughts most of the time, even when he's doing regular things, like opening a door or serving her a plate of food. Ridiculous and unnecessary.

Characters:

Fayre: she's our main character, a teen girl forced to hunt in the woods every day to sustain her family. She lives in a hovel, with a father who's almost a ghost and two sisters who never raise a finger to help her. But she promised her mother she would take care of them and that's why she goes out every day, risking her life, to bring food home. She's also illiterate, meaning that she never learned to write or read. I like this major flaw she has because it makes her different from the typical, perfect YA heroines, it makes her real, flawed, problematic. It also creates - later in the book - a situation where, without the help of someone else, she would've died because of this, bringing down Lucien with her. I LOVE THIS! I find very unrealistic when YA protagonists always manage to beat their enemies and overcome their obstacles, just thanks to their smart ass and their countless qualities. Fayre isn't like that: she is smart - of course - but she's not perfect, she makes mistakes, she doesn't always know how to act and she can't do it alone. I also really enjoyed her love for art and painting, this side of her which wasn't necessary for the purposes of the story, but it made her three-dimensional and unique, giving Sarah the opportunity to describe things like Fayre would see them, with the artist's eye. Fayre is that girl who immediately steals your heart and she grows on you with every page you turn. The only thing I didn't like about her is how she behaved with Tamlin at the beginning of her stay in Prythian, how she was always rude and cold, even though he was trying to make her feel comfortable, even though he was always nice, sweet and kind. That didn't make a lot of sense to me, just like it didn't make sense, later on, her crush for Tamlin, which - for me - was really out of nowhere. I get it, he's hot, strong, with a good hearth, I get that he's likable, but I didn't really get when she fell in love with him. How did that happen? To me, it felt clichè and forced, given the fact that it almost seems like she falls in love with him because he has ripped abs, huge arms, golden hair and perfect jaw.

Tamlin: to be honest, to me he's indifferent. At this point I don't hate him - of course, he didn't do anything wrong (yet) - but I don't love him either, and not because there's something bad about him. It's just that, among all the characters, he's one of the few two-dimensional. He doesn't really grow or develop through the story, he's the same since the beginning: nice, kind, sweet, with a deep love for his territories and his people and a great moral code. He just doesn't make me go WOW. But - having read some little spoilers here and there - I know that this should change in the next book.

Lucien: he's one of my favorites! Just like Fayre, he's not perfect, he makes mistakes and regrets it, he's peevish and a bit harsh at the beginning, but then he starts to get close to Fayre and they develop a trusting friendship. He helps her while she's locked Under the Mountain and she promises Tamlin to always protect her, even though he's not the one in love with her. There's nothing much to say about him, because - despite everything - he's a very background character, but I liked him.

Amarantha: she's our villain, with a capital V. She's cruel, hateful, sadistic. She's just the worst. But I loved her. I mean, I hated her and everything she did, the pain she inflicted with joy, the deaths she caused with no regrets, the perverse pleasure with which she cursed Jurian and forced him to live forever, trapped in his own eyeball, after torturing him and destroying his body. Oh my God, how much I despise that woman. But I also loved her as a character, I loved how Sarah built her story and gave her a reason behind this cruelty. She's not just a bad woman, she goes bad because people make her suffer and this is her reaction. It's isn't right or justifiable, but it makes sense and it gives her character an interesting facet.

Rhysand: I don't have much to say about him, given the fact that he was present just at the very end of the book. I have to admit that he has the typical bad boy charm. I don't like bad boys in real life - if I could, I would punch all of them right in the face - but I'm a sucker for bookish bad boys and I just don't understand why! I think it's because they have more room to develop, to change, to grow, to astound me and I enjoy witnessing all of this, almost being a part of it. Rhysand is loyal to his court and everything he does - good or bad - it's for the sake of his people: that's why he serves Amarantha, why he's willing to lose his dignity, to be her "whore". That's also why, in the end, he betrays her and helps Fayre to complete her three tasks, he literally saves her life twice! We love him just for this reason, right? I still don't have a clear image of him and I guess I'll have to wait and read the sequel to really understand what's going on.

That's it. I thought I was starting another plain, boring fantasy series, but I had to change my mind and I honestly can't wait to read A Court of Mist and Fury!
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Ginevra
3,0 su 5 stelleA bit of a sloppy beginning
Recensito in Italia 🇮🇹 il 8 marzo 2021
I don't think this book has anything to do with Buffy or Game of Thrones, contrary to what the editorial reviews are suggesting. Overall, this book wasn't for me. The writing is very repetitive. There are chapters that feel like fillers. The protagonist and her love interest have no chemistry, and it's hard to stay hooked. You got to give it to the side characters, like Rhysand and Lucien, for keeping the story interesting.
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Da Italia

Serena Orlando
2,0 su 5 stelle A little overrated
Recensito in Italia 🇮🇹 il 10 agosto 2021
Acquisto verificato
A little overrated and kind of unrealistic, I couldn't finish it
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Stefy_
2,0 su 5 stelle Fantasy con (pochi) alti e bassi
Recensito in Italia 🇮🇹 il 6 luglio 2016
2.5 stelle

Interpretando la parte della pecora nera come mi piace tanto fare, devo dire che mi aspettavo molto di più. Sia perché conoscevo già l'autrice, sia perché l'opinione generale delle recensioni era ottima.

Invece è cominciato con "sono certa che amerò alla follia questo libro!", per poi passare a "è l'ora del sonnellino"? e infine "Rhysand sei il più figo!!!". L'inizio era davvero promettente, l'ambientazione anche... ma quando Cupido ha scoccato la sua freccia le cose sono iniziate a precipitare. Mi piace che ci sia quel po' di romance che renda il tutto più "peperino", ma non sopporto benissimo le scene smielate e strappalacrime, quindi già solo questo è un punto a sfavore.

La parte centrale poi l'ho trovata piuttosto noiosa, con la protagonista che non faceva altro che rimuginare, pensare nostalgicamente al Fae che aveva insultato apertamente fino a poco tempo prima, e che va avanti e indietro come un animale braccato in un luogo che non riconosce più come casa sua dopo essere stata allontanata dal posto in cui sarebbe dovuta rimanere. E se solo avesse avuto un po' più di sale in zucca lo avrebbe fatto, con tutti gli avvertimenti che aveva ricevuto. Ma l'intelligenza non è una delle sue doti primarie, a quanto ho potuto notare.

Successivamente le cose si sono movimentate un po' per fortuna, ma bisogna anche dirlo che il merito va soprattutto a Rhysand. Il fighissimo, intelligente, misterioso, fortissimo e malizioso Rhysand, aggiungerei! Con il suo atteggiamento contribuisce a rendere più coinvolgente la storia, e nonostante faccia la parte del "cattivo" (anche se qui ci sarebbe una lunga parentesi da aprire) non ho potuto fare a meno di preferirlo a Tamlin e ad innamorarmene follemente! Infatti Feyre mi è parsa un tantino patetica, totalmente diversa dalla ragazza aggressiva e decisa che avevo incontrato nelle prime pagine. Sempre bisognosa di aiuto che riceve e per il quale non ringrazia, priva di arguzia... rimpiango amaramente la Celaena del Trono di ghiaccio.

Non è che l'abbia trovato illeggibile, ma ci sono stati tanti piccoli elementi (se una protagonista insoddisfacente la si può considerare "piccolo elemento") che hanno abbassato il mio indice di gradimento.
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Da altri Paesi

Anne Pruitt
2,0 su 5 stelle ACOTAR is nothing more than erotica
Recensito negli Stati Uniti 🇺🇸 il 13 novembre 2018
Acquisto verificato
So here I sit, having gone through the OMG ACOTAR SERIES IS AMAZING phase, and out the other end, I can sit back and think "What the actual hell?"

I'm a HUGE Maas fan, so when I found out she was writing another series, I had to have it. For the first time in a long time, my library actually got the book within a month of its release, so I checked out ACOTAR and read it in a single day. I loved it.

Books two came out, and while I was super disappointed in the pointless sex thrown in every so often and whole chapters dedicated to this nonsense, I continued reading because the story was compelling enough. And then ACOWAR emerged, and everything changed.

This was a series I read numerous times before ACOWAR came out, and I saw things that genuinely bothered me, but I ignored them (I don't even know why) until I just couldn't stand it anymore.

ACOTAR is nothing more than erotica. I feel like the series as a whole started out with plans of being some sort of "story" porn that has a kick-ass plot with "hot" scenes thrown in for whatever reason, and then it got to ACOWAR and decided it wanted to be The Bachelor or a soap opera instead.

The relationship between Tamlin and Feyre GREATLY disturbs me. She's taking care of her family and he swoops in after she accidentally kills a fae (who was disguised as a wolf int he woods where hunters hunt...) and takes her away, claiming she's going to be in trouble and damned and blah blah. No, she's pampered and given servants and pretty clothes and good food. Tamlin dresses her up like a doll and makes snide remarks when she falls short of his goals (fae goals, mind you).

Feyre is a HUMAN. Tamlin is fae. He acts like her humanity is a curse or something to hold against her, and he constantly makes remarks about how she's too fragile, too uneducated, too plain, etc. Instead of "fixing" these issues, Tamlin does nothing other than tell her what to do and not do.

He sexually assaults her after Calanmai, and in the book Feyre shows how much she does not want his advances, and he shoves her against the wall and BITES her, then tells her not to ever go against him again. How is this OK? If my husband ever did this to me, I'd kick him in the crotch and leave. This is not OK. This is not a relationship. This is abuse, which is why it disgusts me that people go on and on about Tamlin.

The fact that Feyre and Tamlin have sex at a later time after he did this makes it worse. why, Feyre, are you going to throw yourself at a man who A) Doesn't care about you based off his degrading comments and B) threatens you. Not only that, he basically blames her for a near-rape experience when he literally did nothing to look out for her and/or stop the guys who were going to attack her?

That being said, I have a lot of issues with Feyre. She gets off too easy on everything, and it's like her brain is only wired to care if the dude is hot. You take care of your family, but then you walk into Tamlin's embrace after the things he has said and done. I understand she has been abused by this, but at the same time, she could have said no. Death is a lot better than basically being a sex slave or punching bag to an immortal person determined to imprison you until you die.

She's never punished for killing a fae. Lucien and Tamlin tell her about magical creatures that could give her what she wants, and the next day she walks out and finds them...the elusive creatures...that are hard for fae to find?

Lucien is about the only well developed character, and he's too sexualized sometimes for me to take me seriously. If you keep pointing out the abs, tanned skin, or whatever on the dude, you're turning them into a slab of meat. All of the males, and truthfully the females as well, in ACOTAR are "perfect" in the idea of what today's society thinks is beauty, sexy, and amazing at everything. This is sexist on every account. Your characters become nothing more than fantasies--which is why I say this is nothing more than porn/erotica.

Sure, you can get some great messages out of this series, but is it worth all of the dung in the way? Specifically with the later books, there's too much sex at some points for it to even be OK. Please, go try to have sex that many times or for days on end and tell me how that is. if you can do that, I'm sorry, but you're either a whore or you're just kinda crazy, because that's too much.

Why I ever read this book and like it, I truthfully don't know, but I'm done with this series. I'm done with this fandom, and I'm fed up with seeing people "swoon" or make comments or even draw/like at that nude art about LITERARY CHARACTERS. Guys, seriously? This is not a book for young girls, but when I went to the first (and last) Maas event, most of the audience there were between the ages of 14-20 (predominately 15-17 years of age) and SCREAMED when Maas was mentioning SEX SCENES. I'm not going to continue to support a series that is encouraging young teens and young women to have unrealistic ideas of men as well as sexual fantasies, especially the married women who I've seen act this same way. if I were your husband, I wouldn't be able to deal with that. I wouldn't want those books in my house.

About the only good thing I have to say for ACOTAR was that there actually was a plot in this book, and it was good, if insanely slow to get rolling, and the amount of sex was fairly minimal.
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miekojeido
2,0 su 5 stelle A review from a not-so-young adult
Recensito negli Stati Uniti 🇺🇸 il 14 novembre 2022
Acquisto verificato
**This review will be SPOILER FREE**

A bit about myself: I'm not an avid reader, and not even an avid fantasy reader. I do, however, tend to get lost in books, regardless of how good or bad they are. I can't NOT finish a book - I'm the reader equivalent of a rubbernecker who is a little TOO engaged with a freeway accident And as the title suggests, I am probably a little older than this book's intended audience, so please keep that in mind.

TL;DR: this book was predictable and gratuitous at times, but the gravest shortcoming was the disappointing character depth and progression.

*Predicability*
Despite it's wonky pacing, I read this book fully knowing the "twists and turns" that were to come. I quote "twists and turns" because I don't actually feel like there were any successful twists - the author was trying to surprise me by hiding just around the corner, blissfully unaware I could see her silhouette against the wall. To be fair: I don't think predicability is always bad - I am here for the journey, not the destination. But I found her predicable use of peculiar, adolescent jargon to be particularly awkward to me. I didn't enjoy the twists she attempted, nor the writing in which she brought me to them.

*Gratuitous*
I did not think the love scenes were gratuitous, fwiw. I did, however, find other descriptors in other parts of the book to be exceedingly so, written in a way that felt like it was trying very, very hard to provoke a trauma response. I honestly thought it went too far, making it feel almost comedic and nonsensical.

*Character Depth and Progression*
This is the part I feel the strongest about - Feyre's character made no sense. In the spirit of not spoiling things: her decisions mid and later in the book felt completely divorced from the character we discover in the beginning. Her perspective on certain characters changes throughout the book, but in a way that I never found convincing - she was somehow able to do a complete 180 on certain characters, but without understanding anything about their motives. I could never convince myself that Feyre was a real person, because she acted more like a vessel for a cruel reader to answer the question: "What if she made the worst decision? What does that consequence look like?".

One could argue that she is young, thus leading her to make certain (terrible) decisions - but is that really enough? She's young, but was forced to grow fast due to her upbringing. And having her decision-making process bank on an implied "well she's young" seems flimsy and best and insulting at worst.

One could argue that she's driven by really strong emotions, but again, this feels insulting. Like we're falling into the stereotype of the "emotional to the point of impracticality" female character. And honestly, many of her less-than-thought-through decisions aren't emotional, but simply short-sighted and stubborn to be stubborn. It's infuriating to read - why is she making all these illogically risky decisions, when her whole life she's been trained to be risk-adverse?

2/5 stars. It was not good, but it was an entertaining. 2 stars because there's one character that I particularly like (will not say who as to not spoil... but spoiler, it's not Feyre) and I'm going to continue to read to follow their journey.
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K Reviews
2,0 su 5 stelle Beauty and the Beast Retelling - Unsympathetic Protagonist
Recensito negli Stati Uniti 🇺🇸 il 30 luglio 2022
Acquisto verificato
NOTE: I read this as part of a 4 book "omnibus" of the first 4 books in this series.

I always seem to rate the insanely popular books harshly. Am I being a contrarian? Were my expectations set too high by the reputation of the book? Do I feel more free to rate a book lower when my opinion will be the tiniest drop in the ocean? Probably a little of all three, frankly.

I picked this up for Fantasy Bingo for "Cool Weapon". Unfortunately, I didn't look closely enough and didn't realize the book that would qualify for this is actually the second in the series, the similarly named "A Court of Mists and Fury." Oops, that one is on me.

That being said, this book didn't click for me. It's a Beauty and the Beast retelling with a dash of evil faerie court politics and a mishmash of bits picked up from Celtic/Welsh mythology.

I'm not a fan of the trope of a central conflict being out of lack of communication. To the book's credit, at least there's a reason for it in this case, but it's still not something I love. I also didn't buy the romance here at all - nor the clear setup of some kind of love triangle that I assume plays out in the sequels.

I have become more and more a character-focused reader. The characters here just didn't work for me. The protagonist, despite having a good (and fairly sympathetic backstory) manages to make so many ridiculous choices and have no consistency between thought and deed that it killed the interest I had in her.

Lastly, the pacing was kind of atrocious. I felt like this needed a hard edit down. It took 450 pages to tell a story that probably could have lost 100 pages and not been any different. The pace did pick up in the final 100 pages or so, but it's a bit of a slog until then. The sequels clock in several hundred pages longer. I don't see myself continuing with the series at this point even though I already own at least some of them as part of an omnibus edition.
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Annie
2,0 su 5 stelle Predictable
Recensito nel Regno Unito 🇬🇧 il 11 marzo 2023
Acquisto verificato
Read this as one of our bookclub choices but really didn't enjoy it. The plot was childish and completely predictable. I didn't like the blood and gore either. In fact there is absolutely nothing to recommend this book.
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Me666
2,0 su 5 stelle Meh. No thanks.
Recensito nel Regno Unito 🇬🇧 il 3 luglio 2022
Acquisto verificato
Beauty and the Beast and Tamlyn are two of my favourite tales, so I was hoping for a wonderful new take on them....nope, didn't find it here. While I felt the world of Pythian was set up well enough, once we actually got there, all the mystery and fear went out of the window. Wasn't strange and few at all. As for those men, they were just modern, extra-Hawt males in fancy costume. Not mysterious, not fey, not scary or dangerous. And will you American authors just get over this 'tan' thing with skin?? If you want to write a brown man, just write a brown man! Not just a white man with a tan! (pale men are sexy too, thanks.)
Then there's the sass. Didn't get any sense that Feyre (stupid name) was afraid of the beast at all. No heart-thumping, no pants-wetting, no shaking. Just 'OMFG please don't eat my sisters, take me!' and...that's it. And when she gets to Pythian, she's more concerned about not having to wear a dress than shaking with fear of her captors. She apparently intends to escape but it doesn't read like it's first and foremost on her mind - just when she remembers. Anyone really in a situation they actually intend to escape from will be up a height working on it every single second as the adrenaline pumps and their mind goes into overdrive. Not Feyre. No, since she's here, she may as well take close notice of her clothes and enjoy all the food she now gets to eat while giving Tamlin lip.
Hard pass.
2 stars for at least knowing the tale of Tam Lyn though.
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H. Houser
2,0 su 5 stelle eh... Not worth reading.
Recensito negli Stati Uniti 🇺🇸 il 4 novembre 2022
Acquisto verificato
I'm not a huge literature-phile. But I do appreciate good writing, good plot, likeable characters with some depth. This isn't really that. The plot is a bit contrived, maybe? it's a somewhat complicated setting with magic rules and power-heirarchy and everything is just plainly explained to the reader - no subtlety. Told, and not shown. There's lots of random magical things that happen that the reader had no idea could happen - and I'm like...wait...What just happened - where the heck did that come from? The setting and rules don't strike me as particularly well put together - it's seems like the author was trying toe hard to be creative and different. It's told in first person and there is very little complexity or depth to the characters or the relationships. It was hard to really get into the romance because I didn't find it believable - especially the two-dimensional hero of the book. I'm near the end now and the plot is exciting and interesting - but I just think it could be a lot better done if it was more subtle and the characters more real. It's almost like a children's book, except for the sexual content - which seems out of place to me because the rest of the book isn't written with any adult sophistication. I admit, though, I am really picky about books and hard to please. Charlotte Bronte or Tolkein far outweighs almost anything written today.
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Alice Otaibi
2,0 su 5 stelle 3.5 stars for the first half, 1.5 stars for the second half
Recensito negli Stati Uniti 🇺🇸 il 12 marzo 2023
Acquisto verificato
So I clicked my tongue and rested my face-- my handsome face on my magically clawed hand, while I smirked and then growled, and wondered how ever would I be able to paint this review in less than three heartbeats.
Okay, the writing is fanfiction like, but I don't mind that at all because I like to read fanfic, but I felt that the last 20% of the story was so ridiculous and just drama for the sake of drama/shock, sadly I won't be continuing this book series.
I can see why a lot of people like it , but it's just not for me.
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Michaela Cohen
2,0 su 5 stelle Irritatingly Convenient for our MC
Recensito negli Stati Uniti 🇺🇸 il 30 luglio 2022
Acquisto verificato
Feyre is your classic 'I'm not like other girls", bow wielding female YA protagonist. She hardly has any positive relationships with any of the other female characters and spends half the book complaining about her sisters. Although her sisters get developed later in the book, their starting personalities don't really make sense. 8 years of poverty and Feyre is the only one who does anything? It's a very manufactured sad backstory that goes heavy handed with the "My family is bad :( "

It's also very heavy handed with "Faeries are bad". And Tamlin growling every single word he says. Not to mention, it is awfully convenient that he takes her in to begin with. And as more gets revealed later on in the book, it is PAINFUL how convenient for the plot her circumstances are. The whole thing is so tropey and predictable and works out too perfectly for her. Even with the hardships and trials she faces, the book doesn't spend enough time on any of her trails for them to feel like they are actually consequential.

As for the sexy scenes in the book, they always come at such random awkward times. Got kidnapped and tortured by the bad guy? Finally able to sneak away to be alone for the first time in months? Time to rip those clothes off! No time for romance here folks! No time for "oh my god are you ok? you almost died like 3 times!"

Lucien was really the only character that any depth to him. Nesta started to grow on me during the second half of the book. But our two main characters just felt so one dimensional.
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