Ebook Free , by Jenna Glass

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, by Jenna Glass

, by Jenna Glass


, by Jenna Glass


Ebook Free , by Jenna Glass

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, by Jenna Glass

Product details

File Size: 3305 KB

Print Length: 545 pages

Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1984817205

Publisher: Del Rey (March 5, 2019)

Publication Date: March 5, 2019

Language: English

ASIN: B07DMZCKPM

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#50,704 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

I read a rather snarky review of this in Locus Magazine, but decided to buy it anyway & I'm glad I did. This is an exciting book that, as others have said, focuses on the role(s) of women in a punishing, patriarchical society in which women are only good for bearing sons, sex, & making minor magic potions (the latter two in the Abbey of the Unwanted where women are discarded for whatever reason a man sees fit). The magic is based on masculin (which few women can see), feminine (ditto for men), & neutral motes being combined for various usages, all of which are generated by 7 wells found in 7 different locales in this world. The magic using male mote combinations can be lethal, the female more for love, fertility, healing, etc. The book centers around a huge change due to a spell (which took generations of breeding the proper Unwanted women to pull it off - reminded me a little of the Bene Gesserit in Dune) which allowed women to not only control their fertility, but to also to see & use male magic motes, thus to kill. The broad impact of this is not understood by anyone until the Abbey of Unwanted is exiled to try to undo the spell; they end up in a a desert area where a Women's Well is discovered with a mixture of motes no one has ever seen, thus new spells are being generated for things never before tried. These previously unknown capabilities are a potential catalyst for a new world order.Others have described the characters, so I won't, except to say there are really bad men (2 particularly), several decent men, & some a mix of both, but the logical types one would expect from a long-term patriarchical society that doesn't hold women in high regard. The women are well-drawn, and they begin learn to use their new powers in ways that make sense, rather then immediately becoming warriors, e.g. Reviewers (including the one aforementioned in Locus) have found the lack of LGBTQ characters to be a major flaw, I can only say that societies with such an emphasis on patriarchy & toxic masculinity would likely have bred out any who did not meet the norm centuries ago.I also do not understand those who complained that the book was too long, and that it ends in a cliff-hanger; I read it cover to cover over 2 days & loved it. As for the cliff-hanger, that is almost a tradition in genre, The Two Towers or Star Wars Epiisode 4 anyone?My only complaint is the world isn't that well defined except for 2 of the 3 kindoms and one of the 4 principalities; since the 7 wells are critical to the magic in use, it would have been helpful to better understand which well in which locale provides what.Other than that, The Women's War has love, hate, kindness, brutality, discovery, & big changes; it has characters one can root for, those to believe in, & those to despise - enjoy.

In a world where women, even queens, are commodities to be bought and sold, three women give their lives to make a spell that rocks the fabric of society.The story of two women who are left to pick up the pieces is fairly well written and with good character development. Head and shoulders above the sludge that sci- fi is mostly putting out now, this is well worth a read.

So I downloaded it on a whim. And here I am, at 3am on the morning after I started reading,writing a review. I could not put it down! I'm attached to all the characters, and I hated to see the story end. Can't wait to start the follow up?

I've rarely read a book that was so good I raced through it and then was heartbroken when it ended and I could read no more. Thank you for this amazing book!

This book felt somewhat... generic. The magic system was interesting, the female focus was a neat change of pace, but the writing style was merely average. Also, given the focus on equality, the lack of any mention of homosexuality was strange, and the fat shaming was a bit weird.

The Women’s War is one hell of a story. Based on a society where women are considered second-class citizens, if they are lucky, this is the story of revolution led by two extraordinary women.Alysoon Rai-Brynna is a widowed mother of two and daughter of a king. When her father divorced her mother in favor of a more politically advantageous marriage, Alys and her brother were declared illegitimate. And her mother became an Unwanted, sentenced to life at the Abbey.Princess Ellinsoltah of Rhozinolm will become queen when the two most likely male candidates to the throne would most like cause a war. The plan: after her year of mourning, Ellin will take a husband who will then become king. Or so her council thinks.These two women will become the pivotal characters who react and overcome so many obstacles thrown at them in the aftermath of the world-altering spell.The story is complex and so many characters lives are intertwined it is impossible to represent all of that here in a review. So I will pick and choose a few characters…Crown Prince Delnamel (half-brother to Alys and Tynthanal) is the villain to boo at every time he turns up. Occasionally, he seems to have a teeny tiny bit of heart, but don’t let that fool you. There is one horrible scene where Delnamel arrests three senior abigails and then allows his men to rape the women of the Abbey. My heart ached at the scene, but it a critical event that changes the raped women in such a way that those men will have cause to regret.Tynthanal, brother of Alys and lieutenant commander at the Citadel, escorts the women of the Abbey to the wasteland to their new home. It is because of him that the women discover the new Well of magical elements. Thus Women’s Well was founded. Tynthanal is one of the few male feminists in the book.Semsulin, is the lord chancellor and head of the royal council of Rhozinolm. He is the man who talked Ellin into taking the crown. His motives are not entirely clear, though as the book goes on, he seems to support Ellin more and more. I think he only wants what is best for the kingdom and that is a difficult thing to determine.In a society where only men are allowed to use magic, it will come as quite a shock when those men learn that women are not only able to use magic in many ways, but they are also quite good at. If they don’t make room for women as equals, they will loose. Take as much of that as you wish as a commentary on any aspect of women’s history in our own world.The cover by Elizabeth A.D. Eno, is beautiful and inciteful and truly represents the story. Ms. Eno must have read the book before she crafted her cover.The Women’s War is 560 pages long according to the published page counts. You would think 560 would be enough to tell a story. It isn’t. Be prepared for a huge cliffhanger. The only characters whose stories are resolved are the ones that died. The description on NetGalley gave no indication that this was the first book of a series. The Women’s War gets 4 stars from me, losing one star due to the gigantic cliffhanger. (I may have thrown a fit when I finished the book. I don’t remember. It is all kind of fuzzy.) But if I was the type of reader who didn’t mind cliffhangers, I would give it all 5 stars.Heartbreaking, hopeful, magical and emotional. The Women’s War truly is an amazing story.Here is a quote from the book. It was said by Alys’s mother, right before the world upended:"Something is going to happen tonight. Something … momentous. Something that will change the world in ways I can’t entirely foresee."Through Netgalley, the publisher provided a copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.

I should've been the target audience for a "high fantasy feminist epic," yet I found this novel mediocre in many regards and outright harmful in a few others. The Women's War was indeed a story of disenfranchised women banding together to change their role in society, but it included fat-shaming and ignored subjects like toxic masculinity that would have been relevant to the plot. The pacing was slow for a large portion of the novel, only a few of the characters' plot arcs grabbed my interest, and the book ends on a morbid cliffhanger played for cheap emotional impact. I'm disappointed with the flaws because I enjoyed many aspects of the worldbuilding, including the magic system. I don't recommend this novel.

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