Skip to main content

Scarlet by Marissa Meyer

All right. I've officially waited as long as I could. The thing is--you need to know about this book. This sequel. Because it's coming in less than two months and I want you to be ready and not sitting around, twiddling your thumbs, wondering whether or not it'll be worth your time. Hint: it is so beyond worth your time. For those of you wondering, Scarlet is the sequel to Cinder, the first book in Marissa Meyer's Lunar Chronicles. Each installment is also its own fairy tale retelling. First we had Cinderella, now Little Red Riding Hood, with Rapunzel and Snow White yet to come. Ask me how much I love quartets? Go on. Ask me! But I'll be honest. At first I was skeptical with the fairy tale hopping and the completely new protagonists taking up valuable page time with no resolution in sight. I was a bit not okay with where Cinder left off, but the early word on Meyer's take on Little Red Riding Hood was extremely good. And, really, how long have you been longing for a standout retelling of this particular fairy tale? It has the potential to be so incredibly awesome, yet I just hadn't run across one to date. And so with all of this in mind I exercised restraint (I know) and reserved judgement.

Scarlet has misplaced her grandmother. That is to say--she was there when Scarlet left to work a shift at the local pub, and she was not there when she returned home once more. Nothing like this has ever happened before, and Scarlet has exhausted every last resource over the last few months trying to track her grandmother down. But the woman who for all intents and purposes raised her has vanished without a trace, and it isn't until a street fighter by the name of Wolf wanders into her pub that she encounters what might be hope. Of course, it doesn't look like hope all dressed up in scruffy wolf clothing. In fact, everything about Wolf screams out a warning and Scarlet hears that warning loud and clear. But he insists he has information that could be of use in her search. And so utterly against her better judgement, she agrees to follow him. Meanwhile, back at the model home, Cinder has managed to escape the prison and, along with her fellow prisoner and ne'er-do-well Captain Thorne, hijacks a ship. With the Lunar Queen hot on their trail, Cinder is racing against the clock to save her own neck and keep Prince Kai from enduring a fate worse than death. But no one is more shocked than Cinder when her path crosses with Scarlet's and Wolf's in what simply cannot be coincidental ways.
She did not know that the wolf was a wicked sort of animal, and she was not afraid of him.
With this one book, Marissa Meyer has cemented her creds with this reader. And I kind of love that she did it with the second book in a series, too. It exceeded expectations, but it also sent me running back to Cinder to retread all the introductory storytelling, simultaneously securing my love for Scarlet and enhancing my excitement for the next two novels. Quite the feat, that one. The world building in this series is top-notch, and with the second installment we get a wonderful change of scenery. The return to Earth itself (rural France to be precise), was a smart move as it grounds Scarlet and her unique story in an entirely different way from Cinder's. They're different girls. Their lives, their backgrounds, their hopes and dreams are profoundly different. At first I worried about the alternating point of view chapters. I never knew who I was going to be with or for how long. And while I initially quite preferred being with Scarlet (and Wolf), it wasn't long before Cinder (and the hilarious Thorne) won me over again. The ambition of the narrative ramped up right along with the intertwining of the plots. It was organic. I concerned myself with each of them and with the ways in which their individual lives were being altered by the unholy force and far reach of the Lunar Queen. But this story is all Scarlet's. Scarlet--with her threadbare trademark hoodie and her carefully measured thoughts and actions. I loved the intimate admission we receive to her life. The arc of her relationship with Wolf is quiet, sometimes the quiet of first snowfalls and hidden glances and sometimes the quiet of cold sweats and incapacitating fear. It was a perfectly delineated arc, one that crept into my heart on the softest of paws. As you can tell, I kind of have a thing for this book. I wouldn't change a thing about it. It slid handily into the first slot on my Best of 2013 list like it wasn't even trying. So do the right thing. Pick Scarlet up the day it comes out. The better to kick off your new year's reading with, my dears.

Scarlet is due out February 5th.

Buy: Amazon B&N The Book Depository

Reading Order
Cinder (my review)
Scarlet

Linkage
Another Novel Read - "I was hooked so hard."
Carina's Books - " . . . you must read Scarlet the moment it comes out. It is more than worth the wait."
Cuddlebuggery Book Blog - "Scarlet is fantastic."
Good Books and Good Wine - " . . . it makes me want to keysmash all kinds of words of love."
Makeshift Bookmark - "We have a story here, folks."

Comments

  1. 'The arc of her relationship with Wolf is quiet, sometimes the quiet of first snowfalls and hidden glances and sometimes the quiet of cold sweats and incapacitating fear.' - Oh, Angie, I love the way you write and your reviews. For always.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Awwwww.

      I'm so glad you loved this one, too! It was the height of entertainment.

      Delete
  2. Oh how much this makes me WANT the book! If I didn't already adore this series, I would run out and get it now. Your reviews tend to do this to me :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Lol. You are not going to be disappointed, Melissa. Of this I am certain sure. :)

      Delete
  3. I have had it ordered since October, on faith alone, but I trust your judgement, Angie, so I am very excited now! *beams* This is going to be so fun:)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. So much fun. I'm all giddy over the splash it will make. And good on you for pre-ordering. Hope it arrives soon!

      Delete
  4. Angie! You have me so beyond excited for this book. Seriously. I feel like I should make a paper chain to count down the days or something. It's been so long since I've read a second book in a series that was as strong (or, in this case, stronger) than the first one. So, how many days is it until February 5th?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hehehe. A paper chain to count down to book releases. Genius.

      Delete
  5. Anonymous2:17 AM

    Ooh. I'd better hurry and get to CINDER. (I know!)

    ReplyDelete
  6. Ooh, I just read Cinder a few days ago, I can't wait to get my hands on this sequel :) thanks for the fabulous review, as always, Angie!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Did you really? Perfect timing, then. :)

      Delete
  7. That's great that you really enjoyed this book! I'll admit, it makes me super relieved to hear that Scarlet is even better than Cinder. Although after recently reading and adoring Cinder, I'm not quite sure how that's possible. I found Cinder such a refreshing twist on a fairy tale, so I'm eager to see what Marissa Meyer does with another well-known fairy tale!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I know that kind of relief. It is sweet.

      I'm interested to hear what you think of it! Hope it lives up to your love for CINDER.

      Delete
  8. Lovely review ,you definitely made me want to read this. I've ordered Cinder from the library so I'll be all ready for Scarlet. Thank you for all the wonderful reviews this year ,because of you I have discovered Sarah Addison Allen and Lady Jane Grey, so I'm a happy reader :D

    Happy New Year!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh, Alexa. Thanks for stopping in and letting me know. I saw THE PEACH KEEPER on your Best of the year list and did a little somersault of joy. Lol. I adore that book. And the Raybourns are simply above reproach. What wonderful characters.

      Happy New Year!

      Delete
  9. *adds to TBR pile immediately*

    I'm going to have to grab Cinder too! Fantastic review!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, definitely grab it. This is shaping up to be a seriously good series!

      Delete

Post a Comment

You Might Also Like

On Angie, the Relative Scarcity Thereof

I've been a bit scarce round these parts of late and I feel badly about it. But there is a good reason and I've been waiting until today to share it with you. Just so I could include one rather pertinent detail. It's a boy! Fortunately I'm at the point where I'm starting to feel better, so things should soon start resembling business as usual around here. I, for one, am relieved.

Forever Blog Tour + Giveaway!

I'm awfully excited to be a part of this unique blog tour in celebration of the release of Forever by the insanely talented Maggie Stiefvater .  Scholastic recently launched an online community called  This Is Teen  to connect readers with their favorite YA authors and books. Visit their page on   Facebook   for all the latest news on   Maggie Stiefvater   and   Forever .  Each stop on the tour is hosting a particular character from the Wolves of Mercy Falls trilogy, and I have the good luck to be the stop for Sam--my favorite emo-wolfboy!  Sam is so very endearing, in a decidedly non-angsty or overt way. His breathtaking blend of maturity and vulnerability tugs at my heartstrings and the strength of his relationship with Grace is unswerving.  He is warm and thoughtful and artistic, and I liked him right from the start of the series . Because I can't resist, here are two of my favorite Sam quotes, the first from Grace's point of view in  Shiver and the second from Sam&

For Darkness Shows the Stars by Diana Peterfreund

I know this is an almost unpardonably early review. But honestly, I waited on it as long as I possibly could before the effort of holding it in caused me some sort of bodily harm. I've been anxiously looking forward to For Darkness Shows the Stars  for going on two years now, and the day an ARC showed up on my doorstep was just a very good day indeed . When a book you've been dying to read finally falls into your lap, do you ever just hold onto it and savor the possibilities? I do. I did with this one for a little while. Don't get me wrong, sometimes I just tear into it immediately. But sometimes I don't. Because sometimes dreaming about it while you're actually holding it in your hands is special, too. So I savored and I dreamt and I started reading and . . . I was gone. My first reaction to finishing it was a sense of complete satisfaction mingled with sadness that it was over. My second was thinking that I cannot wait to see  For Darkness Shows the Stars  work