Spoilers
I'm glad the series is finally over, it's weird how much I used to enjoy it. I think my love for cheesy YA books has dwindled to nothing in the last year or so. They're just so predictable and trite, there's no originality, twists or turns, and the main characters and relationship dynamics are always the same. It's such lazy and formulaic writing.
-I missed the old Sydney, in the beginning of the series she was her own person, but by the end she was all about Adrian, it was clear that she was just a special little snowflake specially built for Adrian. She used to actually be rather interesting and endearing, but she became a total shrew who did nothing but nag Adrian non-stop and bang on about him and their contrived, mushy love. She was seriously more like an overbearing mother than a girlfriend.
I wasn't impressed that the once ambitious Sydney who wanted to travel the world and had all sorts of dreams, instead got to be a dutiful teenage wife and mother. Sure, she got to go to college but the fact that she was a good little wifey and mummy when she was still a teenager pissed me the hell off. Heaven forbid a heroine ending up single and hopeful for the next chapter in their life. Nope, they have to be tied down to a guy and sometimes even a baby. Why do YA books shove the idea that a girl can only ever be truly happy unless she's practically married?
At least Dmitri and Adrian were into their twenties and had plenty of life and relationship experience when they settled down, unlike Sydney and Rose who ended up with the first guy they had proper relationships with. How ridiculous.
-I hated Adrian, he was as immature and irritating as ever. He acted like a major brat with his tantrums and arguing. He wanted everyone to dance to his tune, and if he they didn't he'd sulk or feel sorry for himself, he was so pathetic.
I had to laugh at Adrian making a real effort to help find Jill and help Nina find her missing sister, when he couldn't even be bothered to do the same when Sydney was kidnapped and tortured. Nope, drinking, partying, cheating and flirting was more important than the so called loved of his life. Yet I was somehow meant to believe that he loved Sydney oh so much. Yea right.
Also, even though Adrian said he would risk his life for Sydney, his actions never really supported that. Even at the end when he was using spirit to help her fight that demon I never actually got the sense that he would physically risk his life for her (whereas she definitely would for him), even the spirit powers he used to save her didn't seem all that excessive (despite what he claimed). Sydney was always the one going into danger and risking her life whilst Adrian was always hanging back, chilling out and being coddled. It never once felt like Adrian would do for her what she would do for him. I hated them together, even though I'm no longer a fan of Sydney I still think she deserved so much better than him.
-I didn't enjoy Adrian's POV whatsoever, I didn't care about Nina or Olive or his spirit powers. It was boring, whatever charm he once had was all but gone.
-HATED all the forced Adrian and Sydney moments to make them seem cute and coupley.. Like the squirrel incident, the pie place, and looking after Declan. Ugh, it was so contrived and nauseating.
-I didn't even like when Rose, Dmitri, Christian, or Lissa showed up. I used to love them popping up in and out of the series but they were so blah in this. I actually hated Rose with her 'slut shaming' of dhampir women that lived in communes, she was a stuck up, judgemental cow. Also, how did Dmitri know so much about dhampir communes unless he'd gone there himself and taken advantage of the dhampir women? With his track record of shagging schoolgirls I wouldn't put it past him.
-I enjoyed the Alicia/witchy storyline when it was first introduced, I thought something fun or epic would happen with that arc, but it ended up being a damp squib. Alicia was a cookie cutter villain and there was never any doubt she would end up defeated. Also, the witches never really added anything relevant to the VA world. I've realised the sole purpose they were included in the first place wasn't to add to the world or for a thrilling plot. No, it was just so that Sydney would have powers, so she could properly be involved in the action scenes and actually be able to hold her own when it came to the bad guys. It was yet more lazy writing.
-What was the point of Olive's storyline beside letting Adrian and Sydney play mummy and daddy without Sydney actually getting pregnant? Oh that's right, it was also to get Nina (the other woman) out of the way and to give speshul snowflakes Dimtri and Rose a snowflake baby. Olive's whole character was just there to make Adrian/Sydney and Rose/Dimitri's relationships oh so perfect. Ugh.
-Loved Daniella, Inez and Jackie. They were the most entertaining characters out of the lot.
-Dimitri and Adrian cousins? Ugh, please. I refuse to believe Dmitri not knowing exactly who his dad was.
-It was impossible to tell that Sydney had so recently undergone months of torture. There was barely any hint of it apart from her casually mentioning it once or twice. Her imprisonment and torture was obviously only done for some cheap drama and angst. If anything Adrian was the one who acted like he'd gone through major trauma, it didn't help that Sydney kept molly coddling him, she practically changed his nappies, fed him and burped him, their relationship was so off putting.
-I was disappointed that the series didn't end up properly tackling the outdated moroi/dhampir dynamics, the racist Alchemists, the fanatical Warriors of Light, and the vile treatment of dhampir women. The VA world was so backwards and had so many issues, there was potential to address those and for the protagonists to really fight for progression and equal rights and something that mattered outside of themselves (instead of essentially fighting for teen love). Instead all they did was make half-arsed attempts at change or make no attempts whatsoever or ignore it entirely. It would have been unrealistic if everyone had suddenly become enlightened but some progression/education/forward thinking/change could have been implemented when it came to the Alchemists/moroi/dhampirs. The moroi possibly being able to fight and defend themselves, and re-education possibly-kind-of stopping one day was nowhere near good enough.
I'm still baffled as to why dhampirs/guardians are cool with being second class citizens. It doesn't matter if they grew up being told they were, they still had minds of their own and were living in the modern world (where millions had fought for equal rights for decades). Surely, some influential and forward thinking dhampirs would have wanted the same equality and fought for it by now?
-And why were moroi so cool with their dhampir children risking their lives for them? Surely, most of them wouldn't want their kids putting their lives on the line to save a bunch of spoilt moroi. Hardly any parents would want their children dying to protect them, why would moroi be any different even if their kids are dhampirs?
Also, how were the Alchemists able to get away with their whole torture/re-education? Why didn't Lissa or the moroi demand they stop that? Sure, the Alchemists were their own organisation but the moroi must have had some say or power in the way they ran things since their job was directly related to them.
-Also, why didn't Marcus or Sydney fight harder to try and change the Alchemist way? It was like they all just got on with their own lives and happily abandoned and ignored all the fucked up things that needed to be addressed. Sydney making one deal with the Alchemists wasn't nearly enough, she could have fought harder and longer or she could have helped from a distance. Her living it up with Adrian whilst her little sister was at the mercy of the sadistic Alchemists was quite disgusting. I didn't want her to be playing happy families, I wanted her to be out there fighting and taking down the Alchemists and making a change, instead her ending was totally insulting and uninspired. I expected Sydney (well pre-AdrianDatingSydney) to do far greater things.
-The ending was over the top cheesy with babies and marriage for everyone. I rolled my eyes at Adrian becoming a devoted dad/husband after a lifetime of immaturity, partying, and dependency on others, it didn't ring true him becoming SuperDad.
I wanted to like The Ruby Circle after enjoying most of the VA/Bloodlines series (bar the last couple of books).. But I think I've just become less tolerant and more cynical of YA that doesn't even try to be a little bit original, and instead sticks with the usual tropes and never surprises or shocks when it comes to plot, characters, or relationships. That said I think that fans of Adrian/Sydney and the series in general will probably enjoy this.