Murder of Crows (A Novel of the Others Book 2)
Murder of Crows (A Novel of the Others Book 2) book cover

Murder of Crows (A Novel of the Others Book 2)

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Praise for Murder of Crows “Anne Bishop is so good at writing character development...that I found I felt like I was there in the story....I love this series, and I NEED MORE!”—USAToday.comxa0“Fully satisfying.”— Kirkus Reviews “This is truly urban fantasy at its finest.”—A Book Obsessionxa0“ Murder of Crows toes the perfect line of gritty urban fantasy with marvelous splashes of humor and compassion. Read it, and I dare you not to love it!”—My Shelf Confessions More Praise for Anne Bishop and the Novels of the Others “A stunningly original yarn, deeply imagined, beautifully articulated, and set forth in clean, limpid, sensual prose.”— Kirkus Reviews “Without a doubt one of the best UF series on the market.”— RT Book Reviews “The Queen of Fantasy...Teeming with intrigue, suspense, heartbreak, and hints of romance, Bishop’s literary skills continue to astound and enchant.”—Heroes and Heartbreakers New York Times bestselling author Anne Bishop is a winner of the William L. Crawford Memorial Fantasy Award, presented by the International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts, for The Black Jewels Trilogy. She is also the author of the Ephemera series, the Tir Alainn trilogy, and the Novels of the Others—including Etched in Bone , Marked in Flesh , Vision in Silver , Murder of Crows , and Written in Red . She lives in upstate New York. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Nudged awake by his bedmate’s restless movements, Simon Wolfgard yawned, rolled over on his belly, and studied Meg Corbyn. She’d kicked off most of the covers, which wasn’t good for her since she didn’t have fur and could end up catching a chill. To a terra indigene Wolf, catching something meant you wanted it, and he couldn’t think of a single reason a human would want a chill, but apparently humans did and could catch one in cold weather. And even in the last days of Febros, the Northeast Region of Thaisia was plenty cold. Then again, if she started feeling chilly, she’d cuddle up closer to him, which was sensible since he had a good winter coat and, being a Wolf, liked the closeness. If someone had told him a few weeks ago that he would befriend a human and care enough to watch over her at night, he would have laughed his tail off. But here he was, in Meg’s apartment in the Green Complex, while his nephew Sam stayed with his sire Elliot at the Wolfgard Complex. Before the attack on the Lakeside Courtyard earlier in the month, he and Sam had cuddled up with Meg to nap or even sleep through the night. But things had happened that night when men had come to abduct Meg and Sam. For one thing, Meg had almost died while saving Sam from those men. For another, something had happened to him on the way to the hospital, causing him to feel out-of-control anger. He had suspicions about what had happened, which was why Sam, who was still a puppy and lacked self-control, no longer slept with him when he curled up with Meg. Meg told people her height was sixty-three inches because, she said, that sounded taller than being five feet something. She was twenty-four years old, had weird orange hair that was growing out to its natural black, clear gray eyes like some of the Wolves, and fair skin. Strange and fragile skin that scarred so easily. She was a cassandra sangue, a blood prophet—a female who saw visions and spoke prophecy whenever her skin was cut. Whether it was a formal cut with her special razor or a gash caused by a sharp rock, she saw visions of what could happen in the future. The Sanguinati referred to females like Meg as sweet blood because, even when they were adults, these women retained the sweetness of a child’s heart. And that sweetness, combined with blood swimming with visions, made them not prey. Made them Namid’s creation, both wondrous and terrible. Maybe made them something more terrible than the terra indigene had imagined. He would deal with the terrible if and when he had to. For now, Meg was Meg, the Courtyard’s Human Liaison and his friend. She began making noises and pumping her legs as if she were running. She couldn’t hear terra indigene speech, but he tried anyway since he didn’t think this was a good chase-a-deer dream. Especially when he was suddenly getting a whiff a fear off of her. Intending to nudge her awake, he pressed his nose under her ear. In the dream, Meg heard the monster coming closer and closer. A familiar sound, made terrible by the destruction she knew would follow in its wake. She tried to shout a warning, tried to yell for help, tried to run away from the images that filled her mind. When something poked her under the ear, she flailed and screamed and kicked as hard as she could. Her foot connected with something. Terrified, she kicked again. Those kicks were followed by a loud yelp and a thump that had her scrambling to turn on the lamp. Breathing hard, feeling her pulse pounding in her ears, she first noticed that the bedside table matched the image she had of it just before she went to sleep, except the small clock beside the lamp said three o’clock. Comforted by the familiar, she looked around. She was not in a sterile cell in a compound controlled by a man who cut her skin for profit. She was in her own bedroom, in her own apartment at the Lakeside Courtyard. And she was alone. But she hadn’t been alone when she turned off the light a few hours ago. When she’d gone to sleep, there had been a big furry Wolf stretched out beside her. Grabbing as much of the covers as she could, she lay down and pulled them up to her chin before whispering, “Simon?” A grunt that sounded like it came from the floor on the other side of the bed. Then a human head came in sight, and Simon Wolfgard stared at her with amber eyes that held flickers of red—a sure sign he was pissed off. “You awake now?” he growled. “Yes,” she replied meekly. “Good.” She had a glimpse of lean muscle and naked skin before he scrambled under the covers. She turned away from him, her heart pounding with a different kind of fear. He never slept with her in his human form. What did it mean that he was human now? Did he want . . . sex? She wasn’t . . . She didn’t . . . She wasn’t even sure she could with . . . But what if he expected . . . ? “S-Simon?” A tremble in her voice. “Meg?” Still plenty of growl in his voice. “You’re not a Wolf.” “I’m always a Wolf.” “But you’re not a furry Wolf.” “No, I’m not. And you’re hogging the covers.” That said, he grabbed the covers she was clinging to and yanked. She tumbled into him. Before she could decide what to do, the covers were around both of them, and he had her pinned between his body and the bed. “Stop squirming,” he snapped. “If you bruise more than the hip you kicked, I will bite you.” She stopped squirming, but not because he had threatened to bite her. Prophecies and visions swam in her blood, released when her skin was cut. Simon knew that, so he wouldn’t tear her flesh. But in the past couple of weeks, he’d figured out how to nip her through her clothes hard enough to hurt without damaging skin—Wolf discipline adjusted to dealing with her kind of human. She’d stumbled into the Lakeside Courtyard seven weeks ago, half-frozen and looking for a job. Simon had threatened to eat her on a regular basis those first few days, which wasn’t his typical way of dealing with employees since most of them would have responded by writing their resignation as they ran for the door. But when the Others discovered she was a blood prophet on the run from the man who had owned her, they had chosen to treat her as one of their own. And protect her as one of their own, especially after she fell through the ice and almost drowned while leading an enemy away from Simon’s nephew Sam. Which was why, since her return from the hospital, she went to sleep every night with Simon curled up beside her, on guard. She’d be less happy about the lack of nighttime privacy if that furry body didn’t make such a difference in keeping her warm. Was that why her apartment was always chilly, so she wouldn’t make a fuss about Simon sleeping with her? It hadn’t occurred to her to make a fuss about it because he was a Wolf. Except now he wasn’t a wolfy-looking Wolf, and Simon as a human in bed with her felt . . . different. Confusing. Threatening in a way she didn’t want to explain. But furry or not, he was still warm and he wasn’t doing anything, and it was still too early to think about getting up, so this was something . . . to ponder . . . tomorrow. She started to drift back to sleep when Simon gave her a little shake and said, “What scared you?” She should have known he wouldn’t let it go. And maybe he was right not to let it go. Her abilities as a prophet had changed since she’d escaped from the compound and ended up living with the Others. She was more sensitive now, to the point where she didn’t always need to cut her skin to see visions—especially if they concerned her in some way. The images were fading. She knew there were already things she’d seen in the dream that she couldn’t recall. Would she remember anything by morning? And yet, even the thought of recalling the dream made her shudder. “It was nothing,” she said, wanting to believe it. “Just a dream.” Even blood prophets had ordinary dreams. Didn’t they? “It scared you enough that you kicked me off the bed. That’s not nothing, Meg.” Simon’s arm tightened around her. “And just so you know? You may be small, but you kick like a moose. Which is something I’m telling the rest of the Wolves.” Great. Just what she needed. Yep, that’s our Liaison. Meg Moosekicker. But the dominant Wolf and leader of the Courtyard was waiting for an answer. “I heard a sound,” she said quietly. “I should know what it is, but I can’t identify it.” “A sound from your lessons?” he asked just as quietly, referring to the training she’d received in the compound in order to recognize what she saw or heard in prophecies. “From the lessons,” she agreed, “but from here too. And it’s not a single sound, but many things that, combined, have a single meaning.” A moment of thoughtful silence. “All right. What else?” She shivered. He curled around her in response, and she felt warmer. Safe. “Blood,” she whispered. “It’s winter. There’s snow on the ground, and that snow is splashed with blood. And I saw feathers.” She turned her head to look at him. “That’s why I was trying to scream, trying to get someone to listen. I saw broken black feathers stuck in the bloody snow.” Simon studied her. “You could see them? It’s not dark out?” She thought for a moment, then shook her head. “Daylight. Not bright sun, but daylight.” “Did you recognize the place?” “No. I don’t remember anything in the dream that indicated where, except there was snow.” Simon reached across her and turned off the light. “In that case, go back to sleep, Meg. We’ll chase this prey in the morning.” He stretched out beside her and fell asleep almost immediately, just like he did when he was in Wolf form. Except he wasn’t in Wolf form, and she didn’t know how to tell him that having him sleeping beside her, looking and feeling like a human male, had changed something between them. --This text refers to the hardcover edition. From Booklist The second book in the Others series continues to tell of the struggles of humans and the “terra indigene,” commonly referred to as Others. Building on the story told in the initial book, Written in Red (2013), Meg Corbyn is finding that life as a blood prophet, away from the man who had owned her, is anything but simple. In this fascinating tale, the Others, including vampires and shape-shifters, are the dominant species of the continent, and humans are the interlopers, barely tolerated. Meg does her best to keep the peace, but when she starts having more and more violent prophecies involving the deaths of Others, she struggles to get the dreams interpreted. It becomes clearer over time that what she sees is a foretelling of war between the Others and humans. Questions of who is instigating the growing clashes and why they are doing it linger throughout the book. The world is described in fluid detail, set in an alternate reality of Earth, with characters that are complex and intriguing. A fantastic sequel to the first book in the series. --Rebecca Gerber --This text refers to the hardcover edition. Set Contains: 1 x Atlas Games ATG01342 "Murder Of Crows 2Nd Edition" Board Game --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Return to
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author Anne Bishop’s world of the Others—where supernatural entities and humans struggle to co-exist, and one woman has begun to change all the rules…
  • After winning the trust of the Others residing in the Lakeside Courtyard, Meg Corbyn has had trouble figuring out what it means to live among them. As a human, Meg should be barely tolerated prey, but her abilities as a cassandra sangue make her something more.   The appearance of two addictive drugs has sparked violence between the humans and the Others, resulting in the murder of both species in nearby cities. So when Meg has a dream about blood and black feathers in the snow, Simon Wolfgard—Lakeside’s shape-shifting leader—wonders if their blood prophet dreamed of a past attack or a future threat.   As the urge to speak prophecies strikes Meg more frequently, trouble finds its way inside the Courtyard. Now, the Others and the handful of humans residing there must work together to stop the man bent on reclaiming their blood prophet—and stop the danger that threatens to destroy them all.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(4.5K)
★★★★
25%
(1.9K)
★★★
15%
(1.1K)
★★
7%
(524)
-7%
(-524)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Slight Spoilers May Be Included

Murder of Crows is the second book in the "Others" series by Anne Bishop. In order to read and understand this book, you absolutely need to read the first book, Written in Red.

Murder of Crows takes up where Written in Red ended. By now, Simon knows that digesting the sweet blood of the cassandra sangue, or blood prophets can cause extreme anger and a feeling of invincibility. Up to this book, Simon has kept that knowledge to himself to protect Meg Corbyn, a blood prophet who is their Human Liaison and lives among them. With the saving of Simon's nephew, Sam, in the last book, Meg has cemented her place among the Others, and can depend on their protection from the Controller. The Controller is the individual who owns the institution that houses the blood prophets. No one knows his identity or how to find him, but the Others are looking. The book opens with Meg's vision of black feathers and blood as the Crows are being murdered and she warns Simon in time to stop the massacre. From this point the visions come faster and many pieces start coming together from the Others, the police, the villains, and other human cities.

I read this book in one sitting (probably drives authors nuts who read stuff like this, when it took them months to write). From the standpoint of holding my attention, I would have to give this book five stars. I was thoroughly engrossed with the book, the plot and the characters. What downgraded the book was a lack of the relationships with the characters that happened in the first book. While Meg and Simon's relationship grew and deepened, it was really the only one. The other characters were skimmed - Tess, Erebus, Ruthie, Sam, Henry, etc. We saw all of the characters from the first novel, but didn't "see" the deep connection with them and Meg, nor see any further development with them. We hardly see the Elementals at all. Instead the author draws new characters into the plot - the doctor who healed Meg after the storm, police, a new village near Lakeshore, Humans First and Last, and a couple of new villains. While it all made good to great reading, this book lost the "flavor" of the first book by too many things occurring simultaneously. In the first book, I felt the leisurely way the author wrote the story and it was fascinating to see each character relate to one another. This book the pace picked up considerably, and it felt as if too many things were going on for one book. All that said, it was thoroughly engrossing story. I liked the direction it is going in and hope that in the next book - which the author is writing now - the story will slow down some and go back to the deep connections and interactions from the first book.
48 people found this helpful
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Dissapointed

I really loved the first one, but this one was kind of meh... When I look back and try to explain why I loved so much the first one I believe it was because of the world building. I think all the creatures that live in the Courtyard are quite interesting and the whole thing about us (humans) not being the dominant species is refreshing, since in most of the fantasy books I've read the supernatural are always hiding, so it was cool to see that this time the supernatural are the ones calling the shots. It was entertaining to get to know and learn about this world, which brings me to why I gave the second installment just 3 stars (and I think I'm being generous): because the wonder is over. Don't get me wrong, there's nothing wrong with the wonder of the world building being over, it happens with every series, always the first installment will have that new-world spark of novelty, that's normal, but the thing is that in this case now that the new-world novelty passed there's not really much else about it, I honestly can't recollect what happened in this book (aside from everybody freaking out about Meg all the time, I'll get into that in a sec) I don't even consider there was an actual climax to the story, all of a sudden when I tried to flip the page I found out the book ended. I was so confused. Then I was like "THAT was the climax?" I swear I thought it was still coming. I guess I'll have to pay more attention the % progress.

Here are my two main peeves about this series:

*Meg*
Yes, it's kind of sad when the (supposedly) main character annoys you most of the time... I'm SO sorry to say this but she is SUCH a Mary Sue, I hadn't seen this level of MarySue-ness since Twilight's Bella. Oh my God, everybody pushes her around all the time and she doesn't even THINK about putting her foot down. It's not like she thinks about it but is scared or shy or whatever, no, she just takes it and doesn't give a second's thought about it. But other times she gets all riled up for stupid reasons, I don't get it. I gave it a pass the first book, but not this time. I was hoping to see her grow at least a bit of a backbone, see some growth, but nope.

And then, we have EVERYBODY'S reaction towards anything even barely related to Meg. Everybody freaks out every time she so much as sneezes. She can't even stub a toe without having the whole Courtyard going Code Red and Simon growling and wanting to bite someone's head off. It gets old real fast, I think 90% of Meg's scenes are just her getting hurt or something and everybody dropping whatever they are doing to run to her. I don't know how they get anything done in that place, since half their days are spent baby-sitting Meg.

*Multiple POVs*
Meg and Simon get so little scenes that I'm not even sure they are the main characters anymore, and it's not that I wanted anymore Mary Sue scenes, no, but I'm just not interested in reading about EVERYBODY AND THEIR MOTHER'S take on what's going on. And the thing is that they really are not necessary, in fact, most of those other POVs are rather pointless. We got plenty of pages of the police having a discussion among themselves about some new event or lead or something, to then have them meet with the Others at the Courtyard to share with them that same information, it was like reading the same things twice, so I mostly skipped those Monty-scenes and read the condensed version when they had the meeting with the Others.

These are my thoughts about the series, not so much about this book in particular since, as I said, not much actually happened in this one. I will continue to read this series, because I really like the world building and I have hope that Meg will grow a backbone in the next installment.
23 people found this helpful
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Another Great Book in the Series

This review is posted at both Amazon and Goodreads.

In Written In Red we were introduced to the plot of this book and it pretty much picks up from where Written In Red left off. Something is making humans and Others behave aggressively and fighting is breaking out between them, leaving causalities on both sides. Not helping the situation Winter, at the end of Written In Red, caused Lakeside to have a major snow storm and the town's citizens are turning hostile towards the Others and anyone who sympathizes with them. Simon has a suspicion of what is causing this behavior but can he figure out who is doing it and how? Can Meg and the Others at Lakeside Courtyard stop a full out war from happening?
In this book Meg is still trying to adapt to being out in the world with all its stimuli. While trying to help the Others Meg cuts herself to bring on prophecies. Her visions come out in single words, fragmented sentences and pictures that need to be pieced together. The Others are trying to learn how best to interpret these prophecies. Meg's Controller is still hunting for her and at this point he will take her dead or alive. Meg's relationship with Simon is deepening but at a realistic pace. I love Meg and Simon and really enjoy how their characters are evolving.
Just like Written In Red, this story is well written, the characters are well developed and defined. We are introduced to some new characters, a new type of humans, and how the blood prophets came into being. One thing I did miss in this book was Meg's relationship with the other Others which for me was seriously lacking but not enough to downgrade the rating.
Kudos to the author. I really appreciated that both books had a beginning and an ending. Both Written In Red and Murder of Crows slightly introduced us to the plot in the next book but didn't leave you on a cliff hanging on for dear life or the next book to be delivered.
I highly recommend this book. With that being said if you haven't read Written In Red I recommend you read it first. Much of the world building and character development was introduced in the first book.
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Fantastic characters!

I liked this book just as much, if not more, than the first book in the series. I love all of the wonderful characters in this book but I also was really drawn to the story. Meg has really sparked a lot of change in Simon and her world. I now completely understand why so many people love this series.

Meg speaks prophecies but she doesn't just come out and say what is going to happen. It takes some work to put everything together. The Others seem to be very good at piecing together her warnings and they don't hesitate to act upon them. There has been an outbreak of strange behavior in both humans and the Others caused by a new drug that has resulted in a lot of deaths.

There is another group in danger. The other blood prophets, like Meg, are not being cared for in the manner that everyone believes. They are used for profit and really live in a prison. Once the Others learn how things really are for this group they intervene. There are some truly heartbreaking scenes involving this group of people

I love the characters in this book. We met nearly all of the characters in this book in the first book but the more time we spend with them the more I like them. Simon is just awesome. He confused himself but he knows that he wants to be around Meg and considers her to be his. Henry is another favorite character. He is always so peaceful and has a really gentle strength. Tess, Vlad, Jenni, and the rest of the individuals in the Courtyard are all a lot of fun.

I would highly recommend this series to others. This is a second book in a series that really does need to be read in order since each book builds on the last. I can't wait to read more of this exciting world.
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Meh, very disappointing.

I loved the first book and quickly grabbed this one after I finished the first about a week ago. I am very disappointed in this book. It has a completely different feel and is very immature in content and writing compared to the first book, almost as if a different author wrote it. There are pages devoted to Meg having her period and all of the "others" thinking that she is in trouble because they smell blood. There is a even a page where she is "horny" and of the characters tells her to stop it because it stinks. These passages were unnecessary and very awkward.

The rest of the book never really gets interesting. The "romance" between Simon and Meg was extremely immature and cringe-worthy, It felt as if they were in middle school and I understand they are having "new" feelings, but it doesn't make up for the fact that it is poorly done and awkward throughout. And worst of all the book was boring. 1/3 of the book was meetings, and the "epic" confrontation with the controller that both books have been leading up to lasted about 4 pages. I won't spoil much but I was just shaking my head with how rushed the "battle" was. When you devote more time to each and every meeting than you do the attack the controllers compound, there's a problem. I don't think I will be buying the next one, which is sad because I loved the first one. It is odd that this book has so many 5 star reviews, the first one I would agree is 5 stars, but this one is not even close.
7 people found this helpful
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Another book that suffered from 2nd book syndrome

Ok. I missed the release and when I saw it was out I bought it and read it in three hours, my excitement sadly turned to disappointment though. So. First, a Murder of Crows is a good book. It still lives in a compelling world with interesting characters, and it is well written and I guess the problem is the first book was So good, I expected much more from book two. The dramatic tension and action of the first book are sadly lacking. In Written in Red I LOVED the elemental characters and how the various species reacted to Meg, and the epic battle and fight in the courtyard. The second book had a Lot of talking, and discussing, and meetings. Things happens "to the side" or get reported in newspapers or tv, but not "in person" or from the pov of the characters. The name is a bit of a pun, (look up what a group of crows is called) which I thought was silly. But beyond the initial crows being run over by cars, that is sort of it. And the evil guys were defeated too easily. With the danger largely missing, and favorite characters in meetings and on the phone, this book tended more towards sappy romance than fantasy epic. Will look to the next book and hope book three runs less to talking and more towards characters -doing-. (If this had been billed as a romance, or teen fiction, I probably would have rated the book higher, but I expected more than I got.)
5 people found this helpful
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A harsh reality

The 2nd book in The Others series continues the storyline of Meg Corbyn a cassandra sangue, who has been given a job and sanctuary in the Lakeside Courtyard by the leader Simon Wolfgard. While this book did not plunge into the devastation that the terra indigene can wreak on the human cities. The author's world building is spot on as she lets her readers know what is happening in the towns, hamlets and cities of the Thaisian continent, where the humans have started a movement Humans First and Last - HFL.

Humans have forgotten that Thaisia belongs to the terra indigene and they have agreed to a certain level of behavior in order to live there, they feel that they have just as much right as the Others - they are about to find out they are wrong.

There are two new drugs out - Gone Over Wolf and Feel Good, someone is lacing food with the drugs and there have been crows in another town who have been killed. Thanks to Meg when an attempt is made in Lakeside, their crows are saved but lines have been drawn and the Others will not allow the humans to harm their own. Harsh lessons are about to be learned. The Lakeside Courtyard becomes the focus of other terra indigene, who realize that the human police force, and the terra indigene have learned how to work together.

This was slow in places, the relationship between Meg and Simon progresses, as does the way the Others and humans in other areas are falling apart. You know something is going to happen but just now when or where.

This is not a romantic story, this is about the probable way shifters would be if they were the rulers of this planet and humans were determined to do things the way we do, without regard for the planet or the environment. Very interesting reading and I can't wait for the next installment.
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This book was all over the place, but never anywhere interesting

Wow, was this book all over the place. I'm not a big fan of shifting from one character's perspective to another, but I've seen some authors pull it off well when writing from a third-person perspective. Bishop didn't even come close to "doing it well." If you're expecting this to be mostly from either Meg or Simon's perspective(s), you'll be disappointed. The author bounces from the characters that you actually care about to the police officers to the villain, and then on to some random secondary character, and most of the time it's completely unnecessary.

The character of Simon acts less and less like a grown-up leader of the courtyard and more like a teenage boy who is thinking of pulling on a girl's hair to tell her that he likes her. Meg is charming as ever, but we really don't spend as much time with her in this book as we did in the first novel. The secondary characters from the courtyard are often ignored or glossed over, and there's much less character development than before. Combine this with a mind-boggling-ly boring and anti-climactic end to the novel, and I find myself wondering how someone could justify giving this book five stars. Yes the author has a unique voice, but she didn't use in for anything useful in "Murder of Crows."
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very disappointed

I loved Written in Red - it was unique and exciting. I was so excited to purchase Murder of Crows but I don't even know if I can finish it. This book is so different - at times I even wonder if the same author wrote it. This is like a YA book. Everyone is so immature! It is silly and completely without suspense. YAWN.
4 people found this helpful
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Enjoyable - 3.5 stars

This is the second book in Bishop's The Others series following Written in Red. I loved the first book. It is amazingly well written. The action, character interactions and storyline were perfect and really kept me on my toes. Unfortunately because the first book was so well done this one fell a little short. Although the interaction between Meg and Simon was great and i really loved the friendship that developed between Meg and Merrie Lee - it felt like those were the only relationships that were shown. No Sam, Erebrus, The Elementals, etc they were mentioned but all the interactions that i loved from the first book were gone. The conflict at the end was solved a little to easily and quickly. Overall I am still glad I purchased and read this book. The quality of Bishop's writing is very good and the pacing of the story is good. Hopefully book 3 will match the quality of book 1.
4 people found this helpful