The Girl of Fire and Thorns

The Girl of Fire and Thorns
Author Rae Carson
Country United States
Language English
Series The Fire and Thorns Trilogy
Genre Young adult
Romance
Fantasy
Publisher Green Willow Books
Publication date
September 2011
Media type Print (hardback)
Pages 423
Followed by The Crown of Embers

The Girl of Fire and Thorns is the debut novel of author Rae Carson,[1] published by Green Willow Books, an imprint of HarperCollins.[1] It is the first novel of the Fire and Thorns trilogy, followed by The Crown of Embers (2012) and The Bitter Kingdom (2013).[2]

Plot

The Princess of Orovalle, Lucero-Elisa de Riqueza, was born as the chosen one, selected by God to fulfill a prophecy shown by a blue gem in her navel called the Godstone. She is the younger sister of Alodia, the future queen of her country and a more beautiful and confident person. She is married off to King Alejandro de Vega of the country Joya d'Arena. It is a country in turmoil and at war with a country named Invierne. Her new husband is kind and understanding, a surprise to Elisa. They leave the day following their wedding to travel to Joya d'Arena along with Elisa's nurse, Ximena, and lady-in-waiting, Aneaxi. While traveling their caravan is attacked and many die. Aneaxi is injured, and later dies on the road, due to infection. When they arrive at the palace, King Alejandro does not announce Elisa as his wife nor as the bearer of the Godstone, only as a special guest. While at the palace, she meets Alejandro's son, Prince Rosario, and his mistress, Condesa Ariña. She hires Ariña's maid, Cosmé, as her own to keep her under watch as she suspects Cosmé as a spy for Ariña. Elisa attends the meetings where she learns about the war. She also finds out about a book called Homer's Afflatus from Father Nicandro. Homer was the first bearer of the Godstone, and his act of service by God was to write a set of prophecies for all the bearers that followed. It was a book kept secret from her in her home country. Father Nicandro gives her a bag full of Godstones whose bearers have passed. Elisa hides the bag of Godstones in a potted palm. Cosmé finds out that Elisa bears the Godstone one day while dressing her and then kidnaps her in her sleep with the help of her brother, Humberto, and a few other companions.

Elisa awakens finding herself traveling through a desert with her captors, who treat her rather kindly, especially Humberto. After a month, they reach their destination. There, Elisa sees the war from the citizens' perspective. Most of the people are wounded children. Elisa meets with the head of the village, Cosmé's uncle, Father Alentín, who says that they need the Godstone bearer whom they believe can use sorcery to battle the powerful sorcerers of Invierne, the animagi. Elisa sees that the people of Joya are unprepared for war. To learn more of the army of Invierne, she, Cosmé, Humberto, and two others go to observe them from a cave hideout. The Invierno army decides to investigate the cave one day and the group flees, leaving Elisa hidden behind because she will only slow them down. Elisa is captured, and taken to an Animagi who wears a Godstone around his neck. She plays dumb and tricks him into sipping a drug to knock him out. She dons his robes and Godstone pendant and escapes, burning the Animagi in his tent. Humberto finds her and nurses her back to health.

Later, a message states that the Conde Treviño, the father of Condesa Ariña, wishes to discuss an alliance with the Malficio, the group Elisa has created to conquer the Invierne. They travel to his village only to discover he has allied with the Invierne. He demands Elisa tell him where the camp is, while everyone else is held captive in his home. When Elisa refuses to give information, he kills Humberto and throws Elisa in the cell with the rest of her party. King Alejandro's men show up and break Elisa and the rest out of the cell. They escort them back to King Alejandro's palace, where Elisa is re-introduced to the king as the leader of the Malficio. The King is shocked to discover it is her, and finally announces that she is queen. At the palace, Elisa discovers her potted plant with the Godstones is missing from her room. She asks Prince Rosario to locate them for her. Days later, the army of Invierne marches in against Joya d'Arena. Elisa receives a message from Cosmé that five animagi are headed towards the palace escorted by the Invierne army. The army breaks through the palace's defenses and kills Condesa Ariña and severely injures the King. Elisa's nurses quickly plan to flee with Elisa and the Prince, but the animagi break in. Elisa steps up as the bearer of the Godstone to save her nurses, and, getting the Godstones from Prince Rosario, which he found in Ariña's room, places all four plus her own into the pendant she stole from the first animagus she encountered. This sets off an explosion that destroys all the animagi. The King dies from his wounds, and Elisa becomes queen of Joya. She is prepared for the tasks to come that God has set out for her.

Characters

Reception

The book generally received positive reviews, with Publishers Weekly calling the characters "stellar"[4] and Booklist saying the book was "thought-provoking".[5] It was a finalist in 2012 for the William C. Morris YA Award.[6] It was also selected as 2012 Top Ten Best Fiction for Young Adults by Young Adult Library Services Association.[7] It is in the running for the 2011 Andre Norton Award.[8]

References

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