I'm a goodreads refugee. I read horror, classics, literary, science fiction, YA, weird, regency romances, historical fiction, history, science, fantasy and random bits and pieces of every genre, it seems like. I don't do as much reading and reviewing as I used to, but I'm trying to get back into the swing of things.
My favorite part of this book is the characterization of Saba, and I probably wouldn't have rated it so high if she hadn't grown so well. In the beginning, Saba is a person who has no idea of her self without her twin Lugh. She describes herself as his shadow, always following. Throughout the book she has to make due without him and survive, which causes her to find a person within herself that's fiercely independent.