The best way that I can describe The Bear and The Nightingale is a book of chilling winter nights, frosty northern forests as the year turns, swirling snow, ice-topped trees, and bare branches. A stormy mystery that (if you are like me) will have you up all night in anticipation. Folk tales and fantasies that suddenly appear to be entirely real. One downfall is the reader would have to be kind of familiar with the phrases used considering it is based on Russian folklore. The main character, Vasilisa Petrovna, has shared her whole life with the family chyerti, and as her other siblings leave home these chyerti go from guardian to friend. For much time Vasya had openly acknowledged the chyerti, but after the arrival of her wildly overdramatic stepmother, Anna, shortly followed by the arrival of "Father Konstantin" the life of Vasya changed dramatically. This book gives us one more example of why we should never judge a person by their title. In this book, you can fight alongside the loyal Vasya, or you can whimper in fright and shame along with Father Konstantin. Amazing book, highly recommended read.
The second book in the Winternight trilogy (after The Bear and the Nightingale), this book through me for a loop. 3:00 am and there I am, in my bedroom, crying and pounding on my bed. I would give almost anything to have jumped in that book and change what happened, but I couldn't and for that, I cried. This book and the one before were probably my FAVORITE books that I have ever read. The intensity, the urgency, the adventure, the action. Everything about this book held my attention throughout the entire thing. Quite often my brows furled and I tapped my teeth together seething. It is all that I can do not to completely spoil the book... and I am thoroughly upset that there is only one more. This book tore my heart out, pushed it back in and duck taped it, and then ripped it out even harder, however, this time, Morozko was not there to repair it this time... and for that I cried, I cried with rage and with hurt and with anxiety.. and I cried because it was unfair. I fell in love with Morozko before Vasya realized that she had. The winter king... gone. Unfair, and absolutely angering. Vasya, being her stubborn self, rejected something that loved her... (to be honest, I wasn't upset.. but putting myself in Vasya's shoes I would have been thrilled the moment I discovered that there was a mutual love) I will not spoil the book, but my rating is 10 out of 10. This book completely achieved everything that I could possibly be looking for. I loved both books, anger or no anger.
Well, guys, this was by far the best book... no, the best book(s) that I have EVER read. I am definitely going to go buy the trilogy so that I can read them over and over and over. I was up from 11:00 to 2:00 this morning and finished this book (yes, in four hours). Some might be a bit dubious over this story, but I suggest that you go out of your comfort zone on this one because IT IS WORTH IT. I congratulate Katherine Arden, however, I am irate with her all the same. This series should have been a neverending supply and I would read every single one of them until I die because I AM ADDICTED TO THEM. This book was better than the other two (obviously, it is the last one) but they were all so good! Also, just so you are all aware, I am married to Morozko, so... back off. This book made me cry, throughout for the cruelty and in the end for the fact that there were no more books of this series to be read. I envy Vasya and her overconfident stubbornness is terribly irritating to me... I mainly dislike her because she is too often unappreciative and IF Morozko loved me (which sadly is not the case) then I would... nevermind that. What you need to know about this book is Vasya is a witch, and for that, she faces great torment from the "holy" people of the city of Moscow. Although they wronged her, abused her, hated her, attacked her, humiliated her, and turned her away, wouldn't you know it, Vasya just had to go back and help them. The eater was loose and it was (which is one thing I do appreciate) her duty to re-capture him... but Morozko. Might I say he broke my heart... For a death god to feel obliged enough to Vasya to risk what he had... stunning. Wonderful book. I will not spoil it for anyone, much-suggested book. I do love them. I wish there were more.