Reading this was an act of bookish masochism, and not even in a fun way. I should’ve DNF’d. Actually, after the last two disappointing books in this series, I should’ve just done myself a favor and not bothered to start In Charm’s Way at all.
Listen, it’s not TERRIBLE. I gave it three stars, after all! - mostly just for the simple fact of being witchy, sapphic, and a little spicy. But the relationship in this one is TOXIC. Gross, gross, gross. The worst ending of all of the books, by far. And I’m just so, so disappointed, overall.
I LOVE lore, usually. I love the discovery of it, and seeing all of the pieces fall into place. I don’t love where the lore of Thistle Grove has gone. It feels to me like Harper is creating it as she writes, rather than actually having it fleshed out and mapped ahead of time. It’s scattered and lazy, and sometimes too convenient. This series could’ve been so good… it STARTED so good.
Also, the more I read this series, the more annoyed I got at the writing. All of the Thistle Grove books are written in a way that you could conceivably pick up any one of them, regardless of publishing order, and understand pretty quickly how the town and its founding families work. As someone who personally couldn’t conceive of reading a series out of order, I find this irritating, but I concede that it’s nice for those who don’t care to read the entire series. HOWEVER, In Charm’s Way takes this to a whole new level. The amount of times that the same exact concept was repeated over and over within the same book was ABSURD. Why are you telling me, for a thirteenth time, about the town-wide oblivion glamor?! I GET IT. They’re written as though the reader is dumb, and I hate it.
And speaking of the founding families - why was this book (and the next one as well!) not told from a Thorn perspective? The first three were Harlow, Avramov, and Blackmore perspectives, respectively… why are we back at Harlow, and then going to Avramov again?! WHERE IS THE THORN PERSPECTIVE?! I thought for sure after book 3 that book 4 would be Linden Thorn going back to Gareth Blackmore - which, to be clear, would be a stupid life decision for Linden, but it really seemed like that’s the seed that was being planted in book 3! Justice for the descendants of Alastair Thorn.
Anyway, there is a one chapter preview of book 5 (Rise and Divine) at the end of In Charm’s Way. I snuck a peek just to see whose story was being told (another Avramov, one we meet in Charm) but I’m not putting myself through the frustration and disappointment of reading another Thistle Grove book. Fool me once, shame on you, Lana Harper. Fool me twice and THRICE, shame on me. I’m relieved to be done with this series. Payback should’ve just been a stand-alone.