Skandar faces his greatest challenge yet in the thrilling third installment of the Skandar series from New York Times bestselling author A.F. Steadman!
To survive their third year of training, Skandar and his friends must complete a series of terrifying trials across the Island’s elemental zones. Friendships, allegiances, and rider-unicorn bonds will be pushed to the limit—only the strongest will make it.
Meanwhile, Skandar’s sister, Kenna, has finally reached the Eyrie. But with a forged bond to a wild unicorn, she is alienated and alone. And when a terrible discovery puts the future of the Island in peril, all fingers point in one direction…
As suspicions grow and dark forces assemble, Skandar must decide where his loyalties lie. How far is he willing to go—for Kenna, and for the Eyrie?
The prodigal unicorn-rider series returns for its third outing. Will this be the one that's finally worth the publisher hype? The bookshop support? The truckloads of money poured into its worldwide marketing? You've seen the rating I gave it, and it's not brilliant – but of all the mediocre booksin the SKANDAR series, SKANDAR AND THE CHAOS TRIALS is, so far, the best.
In every way, writing, plot and characters, this book is an improvement over the first two. It has higher stakes, more magic, deaths, betrayal, everything needed in the middle book in a series to prevent the story for going stale. Is it show-stopping, amazing, the best middle grade fantasy ever? No. You'll still see Steadman not quite reaching her potential with overwrought prose issues and obvious padding, but CHAOS TRIALS is a good turning point for the story and promises a more thrilling adventure ahead for Skandar and his friends.
After the end of PHANTOM THIEF, Kenna has been bonded to a wild unicorn, much like the Weaver herself, earning her the scorn of the Island and the suspicion of the Council. As she navigates her new status and the power she struggles to wield, Skandar and his friends must face their third year Chaos Trials, a set of ruthless tasks that separate the riders from the nomads.
This book was, unfortunately, rather predictable, ticking all the boxes of what should happen and when and dropping foreshadowing like boulders in a puddle; the big twist ending is telegraphed from so far away that you wonder how Skandar could've missed it. The writing itself also suffered from this, specifically the use of so many cliché phrases. You know how when someone in a TV show finds the protagonist and says very gravely, "You better come see this," instead of just telling them what the issue is? It's like that throughout the book, stock phrases used on rote instead of original dialogue and prose. Add to the hand-holding over-explanation of every detail and Skandar's repetitive narration (which barely improved since last book), you have amateur writing that will irritate anyone who is more than the casual reader.
It is the most tolerable out of all the books – but I don't know if that means the books are actually getting better, or I'm just getting used to it.
I mentioned padding as well – and this is an issue I see a lot with these 'one book per school year' books. You can tell when the book is clearly just moving things along in a way that doesn't feel natural. It'll be December, but this plot thing can't happen until February, so suddenly we go through two months of 'and nothing interesting happened!'. It makes the beginning of this book feel especially plodding and contributed to the predictable feel of it all.
I did continue to have world-building issues as well: we meet an elusive group of nomadic riders called the Wanderers, all of whom who have been kicked out for failing their own Eyrie trials. Does that mean they can't ever settle down anywhere else? Even though many of them still ride unicorns? Why are the sentinels so poorly trained they can't stop a new rider in their first year of training? Why did a group of adults think it was okay to leave a LITERAL CHILD with a volatile unicorn on their own for hours and hours per day? Why wasn't it mentioned before that the Island is part of a mini-archipelago?
Many of my gripes still exist from the first two books as well, but I won't bother going into them again because at this point, it's not going to change – though this time around Skandar and co. actually acknowledge that the system is messed up, so I'm glad at least in-universe the characters recognise how absurd the rules are.
What mostly carries this series is its main characters – no, not you, Blandar – and the relationships built around them. Once again I adored the antics of Bobby, Mitchell and Flo, Skandar's ride-or-die (literally) trio of friends who help balance his watery personality and add some much needed variety into each scene. Bobby's panic attacks are yet again relegated to summaries, which... I don't know how to feel about, and Mitchell still has this heightened awareness about his poor relationship with his father (which gets miraculously solved by some guy talking to him lmfao???), but they carried the book, as they always do.
Kenna was unfortunately rather annoying this time around, becoming wholly unsympathetic as a character as she grows resentful of Skandar's position in the Eyrie. I think there's some dissonance between the narrative and what we actually see; Skandar constantly moons about his wonderful sister, but we only see a few moments of her being deserving of his adoration. I mean, she somehow comes to the conclusion that her bond with a wild unicorn – something done only once before by the Weaver, A.K.A. the WORST VILLAIN IN THE ISLAND'S HISTORY, and that is slowly killing her – was completely, totally natural and that the Island should accept her with open arms, and that Skandar should leave the Eyrie for her???
It's hard to feel any sort of shock, pity or emotional reaction for the twist ending because she's already spent the whole novel being insufferable, whether her personality can be attributed to bonding with a wild unicorn or not. I also refuse to believe she actually was on the Weaver's side for the whole year. Someone doesn't articulate the thought, "Help me, Skar. I'm so afraid" and then do a heel-face turn into cackling villain lololol.
(I blame the dad for being so bad at parenting that he didn't get Kenna therapy or counselling or something.)
It does put forward an interesting question, though: the idea of fate vs choice, i.e. whether bonding to a wild unicorn is actually a good thing, vs letting fate decide who bonds who. I find it weird that the book is pushing the message that, yes, fate is better, if you don't get a unicorn through divine intervention then tough luck. Presently in the story, bonding to a wild unicorn without terrible consequences is not possible (magically, at least; no one's said squat about just developing a friendship with a wild unicorn like one might do a dog), and somehow I doubt this is the direction we're heading in, which is disappointing, but we'll see.
I'll tell you one thing I didn't expect though: the romance. The characters are getting older for sure, and there were little hints in PHANTOM RIDER about Mitchell's crush on Jamie – but I sure wasn't expecting how unsubtle it would be here, to the level of Mitchell literally saying, "You like this girl romantically", lol. I do appreciate that the kitten crushes never detract from the story, but like all things in this book it's very clumsily implemented. I am onboard with Skandar and his love interest though so it'll be interesting to see where things go next time.
And with all that negativity, I will give due props to the ending: it was thrilling, dramatic, even cinematic, and it finally puts Skandar in a more precarious position than ever before, both emotionally and as a spirit wielder. It wasn't good enough to bump up my rating, as some of the twists come out of left-field (how are we supposed to know the Weaver can suddenly make land invisible??) but it was paced well and challenged him enough to keep me invested.
I enjoyed myself, more than I have the other books. I had hoped to say I finally read a SKANDAR book that lives up to its potential and hype – SKANDAR AND THE CHAOS TRIALS is not that book... but it is on the right track.
Maybe next one... she said, hopefully.
WILL I READ ON? Oh yeah, we're in this until the end now.
ARC received from Simon & Schuster UK in exchange for an honest review. This title released on the 25th April 2024.
- Nina's death was swept under a rug REAL fast, so I assume Rex Manning offed her. - Kenna will become good again (if not at the end of #4, then certainly by the end of #5), and will either bond to her destined unicorn, OR will find a way to make bonding with wild unicorns safe. - Speaking of, the dapple-grey? Not actually her unicorn. Skandar will attempt to Mend their bond and it will fail. - With Agatha's unicorn dead, Agatha will surely follow. - Bit of a wild shot, but Skandar will be in a love triangle between Flo and Amber.
—
29th March 2024:
New theory: after everyone on the Island hates on Kenna for being bonded to a wild unicorn, she will join the Weaver for real.
(I am convinced this girl will be evil at some point lollll)
El mejor hasta ahora, sin duda. Se nota el progreso de la autora, ya no es tan predecible y cada vez se despega más de otras obras de ficción juveniles que le han precedido.
Agradezco que al principio del libro los personajes hicieran "repaso" de lo que había pasado en el anterior, porque después de un año, mi mente había borrado muchos detalles. Así que si hay alguien con mi misma memoria de pez, que no se preocupe.
Eso sí, debo decir que, para ser un middle-grade, tiene mucha letra y muy poco interlineado, y aun así tiene 368 páginas, con lo cual: es extenso.
Pero, como decía al principio, la historia en sí me ha entretenido muchísimo e incluso ha tenido algún que otro giro que ha conseguido sorprenderme mucho. En algunos aspectos, parece que va introduciendo temas más oscuros (muertes, traiciones) en el típico movimiento de las sagas middle-grade de ir ganando complejidad y oscuridad.
A estas alturas, he descubierto también que ya les he cogido bastante cariño a los personajes y me he descubierto más de una vez con una sonrisa en la cara ante algunas interacciones. Aunque también he echado de menos que se siguiera explorando el tema de los ataques de ansiedad de uno de los personajes, me ha gustado ver cómo avanzan las relaciones entre el cuarteto principal. Además, como se van haciendo mayores, el romance empieza a asomar la cabeza en la historia.
El final me ha parecido bastante potente, pone de manifiesto aún más lo corrupta que es en el fondo la sociedad de los jinetes de unicornio y sube las apuestas para la siguiente entrega, que ahora mismo espero con ganas.
Another Future note: OMG OMG OMG THREE DAYS TO GO!! 😆😆😆
Yet another Future note: EEEEK I FINISHED IT AND IT IS SO SO SO SO SO GOOD. I LITERALLY THINK THAT ITS THE BEST BOOK IN THE SERIES SO FAR
Right, getting to the review, ⚠️ (SPOILERS AHEAD BTW)⚠️
So many things happened OMD!!!! The last 100 or so pages it was literally twist opon twist opon twist. And that’s probably what I love most about this book. I thought the chaos trials were SO COOL, like omg. THE TWISTS THO 😆😆 Like, Nina is dead (Rex defo killed her) There’s another island?!?! (This was in a theory that me and my friend made!!) Arctic swan song is dead (this made me want to cry for Agatha 😭) The weaver is now dead!!! But now Kenna is the weaver pretty much 😭😭 Like wow. This was SO worth the two nights that I stayed up until 2am reading this.😆
A.f. Steadman's endings need work, the pacing is definitely off, such is a trend for these books. The beginning seems normal, if a bit slow, the at the end everything happens all at once. Overall, a decent read with decent character development and some good moments. Some of the character internal monologues went on too long and i think with one of the characters, kenna, the author was trying to make us sympathize with her but no matter what she was just annoying and entitled to me. I will Def be continuing the rest of the series!
4.5 ⭐ Mrvu slabija od prethodne dvije (tek me posljednja trećina romana baš uvukla unutra), ali to je neminovno kod ovakvih serijala. I dalje obožavam Skandara i društvo, jedva ih čekam gledati na TV i još uvijek tvrdim kako su mi knjige za mlade lijek protiv nekih drugih, manje-više bezveznih.
”It is during the Chaos Trials that true riders are born. Quartets will shatter, friendships will fracture, chivalry will give way to ambition. Many of you will fail. But for those who succeed, what will be the cost of collecting every elemental stone? And is a place at the Eyrie worth the price?”
Skandar and his friends enter their third year in the Eyrie, which brings new challenges: their unicorns are starting to act up, having entered their rebellious phase, and they have to take part in the Chaos Trials, their greatest challenge yet. Failing to complete the Trials means being declared a nomad at the end of the year. At the same time, Skandar's sister Kenna, who is trying to earn her place in the Eyrie, stands apart from everyone due to her bond with a wild unicorn. When a frightening truth is revealed, the lives of everyone on the Island are thrown into chaos.
I've been waiting for this book for a year and I am so glad to be able to report that this book was once again brilliant, exciting, entertaining, heartfelt and everything I hoped for. This series is one of my favorite series of all time. The Chaos Trials continues the stories of Skandar and his friends in a very exciting way – the plot thickens, the threads left open in book two are picked up again and the stakes get higher and higher - but also works as its own, individual novel. The book has its own strong plot - a beginning, a middle and an end – and that is how it's supposed to be: no book in a series should just be a bridge, it should stand on its own. I liked how Steadman developed the world in this book, expanded the lore surrounding magic and unicorns, introduced new threats and gave all the major characters new struggles that forced them to grow: some move in a darker direction, while some become better. All characters move forward and many of the central relationships also start shifting, which was super cool. The book manages to balance perfectly between the big and the personal, never forgetting its characters in favour of plot or action: it all comes down to the characters. A lot of the personal stuff was very sweet: there's some romance, there's winter dances and all that good stuff.
I love the characters of this series so much. The main quartet is fabulous and I genuinely cannot pick a favorite. They all have standout moments in this book that made me think "perhaps they are my favorite, after all". Steadman dives deeper into their vulnerabilities, testing all of them, revealing more and more layers of their personalities. We get to explore the reasons for Flo's endless people-pleasing, see Mitchell gather the courage to go after his crush, witness the way the events of the last book have shaped Bobby and made her into someone less over-focused on her own goals, and see Skandar be forced to grapple with his crumbling faith in the Island, his changing relationship with Kenna and the fragile place he has made for himself within the Eyrie. The friendship between the four of them - and their unicorns - is at the heart of the series and made me smile so goddamn many times. I love stories about friendships and found families, and they are definitely that. This moment stood out to me especially, because you really see how they feel comfortable leaning on each other, asking for help and showing emotion: ”’Help,’ he said in a small voice. He didn’t know what he wanted them to do. All he knew was that he needed them.” I especially have to mention how cool it is that the boys are able to comfortably show emotion in front of each other and their friends without anyone telling them to "man up" or "stop crying". The kids make mistakes sometimes and do not always act as they should, they are kids after all, but this is a very healthy friendship the four of them have going on. I love a good ride-or-die friendship group. This quote, among many, made me smile: ”They had worked together against terrible odds ever since they’d arrived. And their unicorns had been through it all with them. Their bonds were strong, even if the unicorns were testing them now. In the year to come, surely those foundations were going to matter more than anything?"
The side characters, especially Kenna, Amber and Agatha, also get great arcs. I liked them all in previous books, but this time I really found myself loving all three. Kenna especially has such a wild arc and I enjoyed every moment of it. She is in a very interesting position and the way Steadman explored feelings of loneliness, regret, anger and being persecuted through her was wonderful to read about. This book is much darker than the previous two, and it dives deeper into themes of persecution and prejudice, which I appreciated. It felt honest: you can't write about oppression without examining all the different ways it can cause someone to feel and react. In this book, the main kids begin to see all the ways in which the Island is not the dream utopia they thought it would be when they entered as new students: it's more corrupt, more unfair, crueler than it needs to be. I liked the slow unraveling of their naivety and innocence, and them learning to question those in power and the structures that they, before, many took for granted. I loved this frustrated quote from Kenna in which she verbalises one of the central themes of this series: ”What is with this Island hating people who’re different? What’s so bad about not being the same as everyone else?” I am a sucker for stories of outcasts finding their place and making room for themselves, people changing and deciding to be better tomorrow than they were yesterday, and of good people finding other good people to fight beside against injustice, in both small and big ways. Sometimes you need to battle to save someone from being wrongfully arrested, and sometimes just a teacher standing up for their student's rights is enough. Resistance takes many forms and all are needed.
The Chaos Trials were a lot of fun. I love stories about magical competitions, so figuring out the trials alongside the kids was great, as was seeing them fight monsters, face their fears, work together despite the trials being designed to tear them apart and learn to work better with their unicorns. The twists in the novel were also very intriguing and some of them genuinely gagged me: I read the last 50 or so pages with my mouth hanging open. I liked how Steadman dropped clues throughout the novel in a way that, when everything was revealed, it all made sense. The way this book ended left me desperate for book four - how am I supposed to wait for a whole ass year?!
One of my favorite aspects of the story was the way the idea of a unicorn/rider bond was explored. Kenna being bonded to a wild unicorn, Goshawk, presents all kinds of dilemmas: Should Skandar aim to fix her? Will the bond destroy her? Can she and Goshawk ever be truly happy together? Can a forged bond be good and loving just like a fated bond despite the brutality of its creation? I just love the way, with every book, we get to understand the wild unicorns more and more. In the beginning, they were mostly just scary beasts, but now, they have become symbols of the Island's failings. As Skandar put it, in one of the most moving sections of the book: ”Whatever the wild unicorns were thinking, Skandar knew the image of them bellowing out to sea would stay with him for ever. It was a damning illustration of what the Island had done. The consequence of the choice they’d made to outlaw an element. These wild unicorns should have been allied to spirit. They should have had a rider to take them on adventures. They should have had someone to love them. But it wasn’t too late. Not yet.” The profound loneliness of the wilds, the fact that they are doomed to die forever, alone without their destined friends, just makes me so sad. I hate it when animals or mystical creatures are sad. On the other hand, all the stuff with our quartet and their unicorns made me smile, because I just adore magical, fated bonds and animal companions. Scoundrel and Skandar are an especially cute, adorable duo.
One last thing I want to highlight is how happy it made me that in this book Mitchell's queerness is made canon and clear. His relationship with Jamie is written in such a delicate, sweet way, and I love that, in this world, even though the Island is divided by prejudice, there is no homophobia to deal with. It's all normalised. Seeing open queer representation in my kid lit would've made me so happy as a child and probably would've helped me figure out my own identity much sooner. I am so grateful that Mitchell, Jamie and the other queer characters in this book exist: knowing this series is such a huge hit and that so many kids can learn about different ways of loving or see themselves reflected in the heroes of this fun adventure series, is so, so important!
I cannot wait for book four. I love this series with my whole heart. Reading it makes me feel nostalgic for those times when I read adventures like this as a kid and gives me that warm fuzzy feeling that only a well-written middle grade adventure fantasy can. I feel so at home in this world.
Agatha Everhart came from nowhere to become my favorite character in this book of the series. My students love these books, and I’d not had a chance to read this one during the school year as it’s been checked out constantly.
This is very easy reading for an older reader; I finished it in two days. A great addition to the series: a new villain or two, new relationships (including a queer relationship where the biggest controversy is that one of them is a unicorn rider and the other is not), and more complications as the characters age. Recommended for anyone who enjoys Potter, Percy Jackson, or inclusive MG/YA-ish fantasy novels.
Στο τρίτο μέρος της σειράς με τις περιπέτειες του Σκανταρ, ο μικρός ήρωας θα βρεθεί αντιμέτωπος με πολλές δοκιμασίες. Δοκιμασίες, όχι μόνο για την εκπαίδευση του και τον στόχο του να γίνει Ξεπεταρουδι, αλλά και για για την αδερφή του Κενά, όπου κάποια γεγονότα θα ταράξουν, την δυνατή τους σχέση. Άραγε μετά από όλα αυτά ο Σκανταρ θα έχει δεύτερες σκέψεις για το αν η Κένα του λέει την αλήθεια; Θα παραμείνει ο πιο σημαντικός άνθρωπος για εκείνον ή θα χάσει ο ένας τον άλλο για πάντα;
Πραγματικά δεν ήμουν έτοιμη για ότι έγινε στα τελευταία κεφαλαία, η μια ανατροπή μετά την άλλη. Οι ήρωες δεν είναι αυτοί που ήταν στα προηγούμενα βιβλία, απο μικροί και χαριτωμένοι, αρχίζουν να μεγαλώνουν και να δυναμώνουν.
Η συγγραφέας μέσα από την ιστορία, περνάει πολύ ωραία, αλλά και σημαντικά μηνύματα, για τη δύναμη της φιλίας, τη διαφορετικότητα, την αγάπη και την πίστη στον εαυτό μας, αλλά και προς τους άλλους. Είναι μια σειρα που μπορεί να απευθύνεται σε παιδιά, αλλά θεωρώ ότι εύκολα διαβάζετε και απο ενήλικες.Οποτε προτείνω να το πάρετε για τα παιδιά σας, αλλά να το διαβάσετε κ εσεις!
This book was fantastic! The best in the series yet! The story was so good and so imaginative. Ms. Steadman has created a world rich in magic and myth. Unicorns aren't fluffy and cuddly. They hatch from eggs are a bloody thirsty. They all have fun personalities too. As always I bought this book for myself so it's definitely suitable for kids and adults alike. The book was so exquisitly written and very descriptive. It still leaves lots for the imagination. The characters again are all wonderful and each are integral to the story. The book is written in third person mostly from Skandar's point of view. Again we have the Interludes from Kenna's perspective. I won't lie this book made me cry more than once! That's emotionally invested you can get in the series. I really recommend this!
Can I give it a trillion stars? ⭐ A.F. Steadman has managed what so few authors do. A series where each book gets EVEN better than the previous, and leaves you literally gasping for breath with the twists and turns this story is taking. You aren't ready for Skandar 3. (Thank you ever after and for all eternity to Simon and Schuster for the advance copy)
A.F. Steadman has paced this series perfectly and I’ce somehow found myself entirely invested in it and its characters and I'm already dying for book four.
"Skandars un haosa atlases" ir grāmata, kas pārpildīta ar draudzību, mīlestību, noslēpumiem, nodevību, mistēriju un nervu sabrukumu izraisošām detaļām.🫠 (pēc pabeigšanas gandrīz 15 minūtes sēdēju un blenzu uz sienu)
No pārbaudījumiem man visvairāk atmiņā iespiedusies gaisa stihijas atlase. It sevišķi draugu nesavtība un uzupurēšanās, un šī atlase pierādīja Skandara mīlestību pret Flo un Kennu.❤️🔥❤️🔥 Viņam tad vēl nebija ne jausmas, ka Kenna nodos pašas miesīgu brāli. Skandars viņu ļoti mīlēja, bet viņai ar to nepietika. Kennai vajadzēja VARU… tāpēc viņa pievienojās Vēverei un Skandars muļķīgi izrīkojās atklādams Gara akmeni viņai. Ja Kennai nebūtu tās saiknes ar Dusmu Liju tad nekas tāds, manuprāt, nebūtu noticis. Bet viņai bija… Pietiks nu par Kennu. Es pamanīju, ka Ambera ir stipri mainījusies uz labo pusi. Viņa bija daudz laipnāka nekā pirmajā daļā.👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 Šajā grāmatā mans nemīļākais varonis bija Rekss Mānings! Man jau no paša sākuma viņš galīgi nepatika! Rekss ir vienkārši drausmīgs cilvēks😰😰 Šajā grāmatā mana mīļākā varone bija Agata. Viņa likās tik ĪSTA un es pati sajutu viņas sāpes, kad Polārgulbja Klaiga nomira. Tas sāpēja arī man!💔
Bet tā viennozīmīgi ir viena no labākajām grāmatām ko jebkad esmu lasījusi💯💯💯💯💯
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Trætophuse, udfordrende elementprøver med flydende lava, dødsensfarlige, klamme vandmonstre, flyvende dueller og intense kampe for overlevelse. Wauw! Der er masser af eventyr, spænding, drama og uhygge. Plottet er nervepirrende og fyldt med uforudsigelighed. Sikke nogle plottwists. Det er virkelig en fascinerende og fængende fantasybog og serie.
Især i sidste del af bogen trækker man næsten ikke vejret af bare spænding og der kommer ligeledes en del øjenåbnende afsløringer. Man kommer virkelig igennem hele følelsesregistret. Der er intriger, misforståelser og både hjerteskærende og hjertevarme øjeblikke. Der er glædestårer og tårer af sorg. Karakterernes venskab har virkelig udviklet sig og de er der virkelig for hinanden. Man kommer endnu tættere på karakterernes personlighed, baggrund og følelser. Det er virkelig en bog, der har hele pakken.
Hold da helt fast! Jeg kan slet ikke vente med at læse næste bog.
Okay so this is my favorite book in this series. This book to felt like it had a lot of action and adventure out of all of this series. Skandar and the Chaos Trials was really dark. But it was amazing. There is some sad parts in this book that got me actually really sad.
Skandari kollanoka-aasta Kotkapesas, Saar. Kolmas õppeaasta pole kergete killast. Ükssarvikud kipuvad ülekäte minema ning noored ratsurid näevad kurja vaeva nende kontrollimisega. Skandari tähelepanu hajutab veel mure õe pärast. Sellegipoolest tuleb läbida Kaose Katsed, aasta peale jagunev seeria osavuse ja nutikuse tuleproove - üks iga elemendisektori kohta. Appi tuleb võtta kõik seni õpitu, kuid proovile pannakse ka ratsurite vaheline sõprus. Ainult kõige tugevamad jätkavad Kotkapesas treenimist. Kui see üldse avab järgmisel aastal uksed, sest osav pikanäpumees on Saare tuleviku küsimärgi alla seadnud.
"Skandar ja Kaose Katsed" ei tekitanud hetkekski tunnet, et eelmise osa lugemisest on jupp aega möödas. Kotkapesa virvarr haaras hetkega kaasa: isepäised ükssarvikud, põnevalt üles ehitatud katsed, lähikonnas luusivad vaenlased, koostöö proovilepanek, maagia ja maailma päästmine. Skandar, Bobby, Mitchell ja Flo lähevad üheskoos läbi tulest ja veest ning nende kaljukindlast sõprusest lugemine teeb südame soojaks. Juba eelmist osa lugedes mõlgutasin mõtteid, kuidas tegelased mõjuvad noorematena. Kui esimest õppeaastat alustati 13-aastastena, siis kolmandaks on nad sirgunud 15-aastasteks. Kõik on loo käigus arenenud, aga murdeea probleemideks leheruumi ei jagu. Skandaril on küll silmarõõm, aga poiss on selles vallas väga tagasihoidlik.
Book 3 in a series that must absolutely be read in order.
In the fantastic series opener, readers are thrust into a world of unicorns that is not pink and filled with glitter and shooting stars. Rather, the unicorns are blood-thirsty weapons, when combined with a rider who is destined to partner with them, can defend the land and its people using magic coming from earth, fire, water, and air. Skandar, with some help from an aunt he didn’t know he had, is bonded to such a unicorn but the two wield a magic far more powerful and hard to control than that of the usual four elements and must not only learn to manage his spirit magic, but find a way to be accepted by others at the training school known as The Eyrie. Book 2 focuses on Skandar and the members of his training quartet battling an evil rider who has bonded with a wild unicorn which has always been outlawed due to the uncontrollable nature of that magic and the tendency to wreak havoc on everyone and everything. Spoilers for those not following the “read in order” advice—The evil Weaver turns out to be Skandar’s mom and she uses her wild magic to bond her daughter Kenna to a wild unicorn as well.
Book 3 finds Skandar and his three roommates, Flo, Bobby and Mitchell entering their 3rd year of training and facing 4 trials that will further winnow out those who are not worthy of continuing at The Eyrie. Kenna is living at The Eyrie but awaiting a decision on whether or not she will be allowed to train. The strain of being separated from Skandar for two years has already taken a toll on a what has been a very close brother-sister relationship, but Skandar is working on a plan to use his spirit magic and his status as a Mender (a healer of sorts) to match Kenna to the unicorn she was destined to bond with. The Chaos Trials for this 3rd, Fledgling year are brutal with quartet members turning on each other, alliances being made then broken and it seems that every man is for himself. Adding to the stress, someone has stolen all the unicorn eggs in the Hatchery and it appears that it could be The Weaver and possibly with Kenna’s help.
Readers will be on the edge of their seat from the very beginning and by the end, may find themselves exhausted from the ups and downs of surprise after surprise. Not everyone is what they have portrayed themselves to be. This 3rd book is every bit as exhilarating as book 1 and I will be anxiously watching for the arrival of book 4.
Steadman’s fantasy series is outstanding and is as much a middle grade read as a young adult, but no profanity or sexual content. The action is non-stop and at times, is bloody and certainly there are plenty of person to person to unicorn attacks. However, as I have send in reviews for books 1 and 2, the author does not get overly graphic or drone on and on in the battle scenes. Race is not an emphasized aspect of the books, but the brief physical descriptions lead readers to believe that Flo is Black while Skandar, Bobby and Mitchell are likely Caucasian. Mitchell’s same sex relationship with blacksmith Jamie gets a little closer and they begin to officially date (hand holding & hugs only) and Skandar finally realizes his more than friend feelings for someone which tuned in readers have probably sensed from book 1 (hand holding and some self-sacrificing actions only)!