Spy Glass (Glass, Book 3)
Spy Glass (Glass, Book 3) book cover

Spy Glass (Glass, Book 3)

Paperback – August 24, 2010

Price
$19.90
Format
Paperback
Pages
432
Publisher
MIRA
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0778328476
Dimensions
5.38 x 1.13 x 8.25 inches
Weight
11.2 ounces

Description

From Publishers Weekly Fantasy and romance jostle uneasily in Snyder's third Glass Magic adventure. Sassy adolescent heroine Opal Cowen sacrificed her magical powers by draining off some of her blood in Sea Glass. Now she hopes to reverse the process, but someone has stolen her blood. While navigating the inevitable love triangle, Opal launches herself into a dicey spy-training program, equipped with a future-telling spy glass and her faithful steed, Quartz. Opal's sacrifice is also Snyder's, and the loss of power is paralleled: without the appealing glassblowing lore of earlier books, Opal's frenetic dual quests to recapture her magic and decide between two hunky lovers loses much of its originality, reducing this limited-vocabulary novel to a superficial and conventional young adult thriller. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. "Snyder's storytelling skills continue to build an involving story line with an engaging and resourceful heroine."--Library Journal on SPY GLASS"Fans of high-spirited adventure, intrigue and romance will celebrate." -Publishers Weekly on Fire Study"...a compelling new fantasy series."-SFX Magazine on Sea Glass"Filled with Snyder's trademark sarcastic humor, fast-paced action and creepy villainy, Touch of Power is a spellbinding romantic adventure that will leave readers salivating for the next book in the series."-USA TODAY on Touch of Power"This is one of those rare books that will keep readers dreaming long after they've read it."-Publishers Weekly Starred Review on Poison Study Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Crouching in the darkness of the closet, I stilled as footsteps approached. My instincts screamed to run. I stared at the thin ribbon of light under the door, shadows of shoes paused. I silently urged them to walk away. All I wanted was one day of peace. One day. The knob turned. No luck. With a whoosh of fresh air, my hiding spot was exposed."For sand's sake, Opal, what are you doing in there?" my mother asked.I suppressed a sigh. The truth—hiding from her—wouldn't help. "Looking for my boots?"Her scowl deepened as she pushed back a lock of graying hair. "They're on your feet."I straightened. "Oh…yes…well.""Come. There are a thousand things we need to do, and you're wasting time." She shooed me through my room and downstairs to the kitchen. "Sit and read me the guest list while I cook lunch."My gaze swept the long wooden table filled with paper, swatches of fabric, lace, sequins, sewing patterns and half-completed decorations—enough clutter to force us to eat in our formal dining room. I cursed my sister Mara under my breath. Before returning to work at the Magician's Keep's glass shop, Mara had asked our mother to plan her and Leif's wedding, trusting her with everything. Smart girl. She remained a safe five-day journey away from Mother's all-consuming new passion.When I failed to sit at the table, she stabbed a spoon at the chair. "Guest list, Opal.""You've been over it a hundred times.""I want to be certain—""You haven't missed anyone. It's perfect. Stop worrying."She dried her hands on her apron. The stained white fabric covered her chest and long skirt. "Do you have something better to do? Did I interrupt your moping time?""I'm not moping." My voice whined. Not a good sign."Resting, recuperating, moping, it's all the same." She hauled a kettle filled with water over to the glowing coals in the hearth."No it isn't. A lot has happened—"She pished at me. My own mother!"Stop wallowing in the past. What's done is done. Focus on the future. We only have one hundred and fifty-three days until the wedding! Then it's only a matter of time for grandchildren and maybe you and Kade…?"Yanking the chair out with a loud scrape, I plopped on it. I snatched the list from the pile and read names aloud as my mother continued to bustle about the kitchen. She had mentioned Kade almost every day since I'd arrived. Sixty-three days of missing him, dodging her questions and being drafted to help with preparations for an event two and a half seasons away. How could one woman be so irritating? For a second I wished for another family. A sensible one without all this… stuff, like the Bloodrose Clan, living in austere isolation."Opal, stop making that face."I glanced over the list, but her back was to me. Long strands of hair had sprung from the knot she had tied this morning. She rolled dough with quick efficiency."How did you know?""I'm your mother. I see all. Hear all. Know all."I laughed. "If that's true, then why do you ask me so many questions?" Ha. Got her!Her hands stilled. She turned to me. "Because you need to hear the answers."My father's arrival saved me from a retort I didn't have. He filled the room with his large frame. Even though most of his short hair had turned gray, he still looked young. My brother, Ahir, bounded in behind him. A mirror image of our father except Ahir's thick black hair brushed his shoulders."Hey, mop top," I said to Ahir."What's up, peanut?" He smirked.I used to tower over him, but now he was six inches taller than my own five-foot-seven-inch height.Before I could throw another insult at him, he handed me an aqua-green glass vase. "New recipe. Look at the clarity. Sharp."I examined the glass in the sunlight. The cold crystal felt dead in my hands. No throb of potential. No song vibrated in my chest. Nothing. My glass magic was gone. Although painfully aware of my loss, a small part of me hoped to feel a spark every time I touched glass…only to be disappointed each time."Working with this melt is pure joy," Ahir said. "Let's go over to the factory, I'll gather a slug for you to try."I gave him a tight smile, letting him know I saw through his blatant attempt to interest me in creating with glass again. But no magic equaled no passion. Before Yelena had uncovered my abilities, I hadn't known about the magic. It had been masked by my desire to create. Now, the inert lump in my hand was just another reminder of my useless existence."I think I'll go for a ride instead." Returning the vase to Ahir, I left the kitchen. My mother's protests about missing lunch followed me to the shed.My family owned an eight-kiln glass factory, not horses. However, when I decided to stay for a while, my father cleaned out the shed, converting it into a temporary stable for Quartz. The small enclosure had room to hang my tack and saddle, and to give Quartz shelter from bad weather. Being a Sandseed horse, she preferred to graze in the Avibian Plains bordering our land.No one would dare bother a Sandseed horse in the plains. I scanned the tall grasses. They swayed with the wind. The reds, yellows and oranges of the cooling season had faded into the gray and brown dullness of the cold season. I shivered, thinking of the miserable weather yet to come. Believe it or not, I had been anticipating this time of year. The fierce storms on the coast had abated. Kade planned to spend a few weeks with me, until the Commander of Ixia had invited him to demonstrate his Stormdancing powers, taming the killer blizzards blowing from the Northern Ice Sheet.Kade had invited me along, except I hated the cold and would rather not be anywhere near the ice sheet. Plus what would I do there? I would have no job other than keeping Kade's bed warm. Well… That wouldn't be a chore at all. I smiled, but sobered. Despite my mother's intentions, my one reason for being home wasn't to help with Mara and Leif's wedding. I needed to make a decision.Unease twisted. My bad decisions outweighed my good ones by two to one. I had a thirty-three percent chance of getting it right. Dismissing those useless thoughts, I stepped into the plains to search for Quartz.After I traveled a hundred feet, magic pressed on my skin as if I pushed against a giant sponge. I waited for the pressure to dissipate as the protection determined I wasn't a threat. It was usually suicidal to walk into the plains without permission from the Sandseed Clan. Their defensive magic would confuse me, sending me into a panic, convinced I was lost. This time, my new immunity blocked the Sandseed's magic. I could sense it, but it registered my presence as a magical void. Nice perks, yet…Without my glass magic, I felt as if a chunk of my soul had been sliced off. I had no regrets over my actions, sacrificing my powers had been the right choice. So if I wasn't moping, then why the ache? Why did I feel trapped in the shadow world?All maudlin thoughts vanished when Quartz trotted into view. Considered a painted mare, her coat was a patchwork of white and auburn colors. The darker color covered her face, except for a white star between her soft brown eyes. Forgoing a saddle and bridle, I hopped onto her back and left my worries and Mother's wedding plans far behind.Sitting in the living area later that evening, I addressed envelopes. My mother had appealed to my ego by complimenting my handwriting and had bribed my stomach by baking my favorite pie—black raspberry.Warmth and light pulsed from the fireplace. I felt better after my ride with Quartz. Mother sat in her favorite chair, sewing Mara's veil. Ahir sprawled on the floor, snoring, and Father worked on bills. A true moment of family peace. And like all such moments, it was too good to stay true for long.A knock on our door broke the silence. Mother glanced at me in confusion, then brightened. "It's the printer! He said he might be done with the invitations tonight, and I told him to bring them over right away."Silk and lace filled her lap. Before she could untangle herself, I offered to answer the door. I suppressed a sigh. If the invitations were indeed here, I would have to stuff them into the envelopes, sealing them with wax. A tiresome chore.I glanced through the peephole. Shadows covered the face of a man holding a bottle. Not the printer. He must be the local winemaker Mother commissioned to distill the special wed ding wine. She spared no expense, and, for that, I was glad.When I had sacrificed my magic, the power had transformed into diamonds. The Sitian Council had returned them all to me, and I had plenty of money to pay for all the wedding expenses—my gift to Mara and Leif.I opened the door and froze in terror.Valek, the Commander of Ixia's personal assassin, waited outside. Only one reason for Valek to be here."Hello, Opal. Sorry for the surprise visit. Is this a bad time?" he asked with a pleasant tone and quizzical smile.It was always a bad time to die.I gaped at Valek. He stood on our front step within killing distance."Opal." My mother's voice cut through my panic. "Don't stand there like a simpleton. Invite your guest in."I stuttered a few words and backed up with numb legs. His smile widened as my mother approached. The need to warn her lodged under my ribs. My body's functions had disconnected, scattering my thoughts."You must be Opal's mother," Valek said. He shook her hand. "Your cooking skills are legendary, Mrs. Cowan. I wouldn't be surprised if the Commander invites you to cook for him in Ixia."The wrinkles on her face disappeared as she blushed, erasing years of worry and stress. "Please, call me Vyncenza, Mr…?""Valek." His name erupted from my mouth. "What are you doing here?""Opal, don't be rude.""Mother, this is Valek ." I gestured. "The Commander's—""Security Chief," he said. "And this is one of our finest vintages of Ixian Ice Wine." He presented the bottle to my mother."Thank you. This is my husband, Jaymes."My father shook his hand. Ahir woke and jumped to his feet. He grinned at Valek in awe as he pumped his arm. The whole surreal scene swirled in front of my eyes like snowflakes."But, Mother. Valek is—""Practically family. Come in. Come in. You must be hungry. Jaymes, open that cognac your brother sent us. Ahir, fetch our good glasses." She escorted Valek to the couch and hustled off to the kitchen as Ahir and my father hurried to complete their tasks.Valek caught me staring. He smiled. "Relax, Opal. I'm not here on official duty."My heart resumed beating. "Then why are you here?""Since I'm practically family, I thought I should meet your parents."A stretch of truth only my mother could believe. Valek was Yelena's heart mate, and Yelena was Leif's sister; ergo, once Leif married Mara, Leif's family, including Valek, would be part of ours."What's the real reason?" I asked."Later," he said as my mother burst into the room carrying a tray loaded with food.My father poured drinks and everyone settled in for a cozy chat. I listened to the small talk in amazement. Valek's infamous reputation didn't seem to bother anyone but me. And I should know better. Why would the Commander order my assassination when it was well-known my glass magic was gone? Unless he knew about my immunity? Only one other person in the world could make the same claim. And he sat next to me, sipping my uncle's cognac.But Yelena had promised not to tell anyone about my protection. Besides Kade, Zitora and Leif, no one else knew. Not my parents or siblings or friends. Not Valek. I trusted Yelena. Then why was he here? No idea. I would have to wait.An eternity later, my mother f inally stopped offering Valek our guest room when he promised to return the next day to tour the factory. I escorted him outside and down the lane to the gate."Spill," I ordered.Amusement flashed in his blue eyes as a smile quirked, softening the sharp features of his face. His pale skin almost glowed in the moonlight, an obvious contrast to the mostly darker-skinned Sitians, including me. Wearing a nondescript short gray cloak and black pants, he didn't quite blend in, but he didn't stand out, either. I gathered from his lack of disguise he wasn't working undercover.Valek scanned the empty street before he answered. "Yelena sent me to help you.""Help me with what?""No idea. All she said was you needed help. Are you on a mission for the Council?"I laughed. "No. Unless you consider wedding planning an act of espionage.""Hmm… My napkin folding skills are renowned. I can make a swan in seconds.""Don't tell my mother or you'll be folding napkins for days.""Days?" Valek's left eyebrow rose."The guest list is up to f ive hundred names with more being added hourly.""Sounds like quite the party. However it's not the reason Yelena sent me."I suspected why, but wanted to make sure. "What were her exact words?""She said, 'Opal needs your help.'""That's it?"He nodded."You've traveled all this way without asking her for more details?""Of course." His tone implied I lacked intelligence for asking such a question.So sweet. He had absolute faith in his heart mate.When the silence lengthened, he asked, "Does this have anything to do with losing your magic?"I suppressed my immediate annoyance over the word "losing." Why did everyone insist on using that word? Losing something implied a potential to find it again. Same with "lost." So sorry you lost your magic, Opal. As if all I needed to do was search for it. No. It was gone. Never to return. Unless I used blood magic and that I wouldn't do. Besides being illegal, it was far better to be without power than be addicted to it. Than to kill for it."Opal?"Valek's voice snapped me back to the problem at hand. Yelena sent him for a reason. She hadn't shared my secret with him, but she thought I should. "I need some time. Can we talk tomorrow?""Of course." He bade me a good-night and disappeared into the shadows.My night was far from restful. The decision to inform the Sitian Council about my immunity to magic flipped from yes to no and back again. My past dealings with the Council were rocky at best. Magicians who graduated from the Keep usually worked for the Council, but I had broken that tradition by going out on my own. This wouldn't have been too big a problem, except I took my glass messengers with me. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • After siphoning her own blood magic in the showdown at Hubal, Opal Cowan has lost her powers. She can no longer create glass magic. More, she's
  • immune
  • to the effects of magic. Opal is now an outsider looking in, spying through the glass on those with the powers she once had, powers that make a difference in the world. Until spying through the glass
  • becomes
  • her new power. Suddenly, the beautiful pieces she makes
  • flash
  • in the presence of magic. And then she discovers that someone has st olen some of her blood—and that finding it might let her regain her powers. Or learn if they're lost forever…

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(586)
★★★★
25%
(244)
★★★
15%
(147)
★★
7%
(68)
-7%
(-68)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Disturbing

This book, this series has left me quite disgusted and stunned. The only way that Opal could ever love Devlin is if she was suffering from Stockholm Syndrome. The abuse she suffered at his hands was horrendous. She was tortured so badly(repeatedly)that her bowels and bladder released! I wonder whether Snyder's description of the torture wasn't descriptive enough for some readers to pick up on the amount of pain that Opal endured. This series almost says to readers there are valid reasons to forgive and love abusers. I really enjoyed the Poison series but I wish I had never read this series. It left me feeling quite ill.
Julie
Aussie Mum
47 people found this helpful
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Disappointing finale

Other people have outlined the story so I won't repeat the whole plot line here. While the author writes well (an extra point for that), I read a few of the reviews and am glad that I'm not the only one who was disturbed that a young adult novel would conclude with the heroine choosing to live with the person who had brutalized her throughout the first books. Even if Devlen had changed, the thought that Opal would want to partner with him was just nausea inducing. Devlen may have been addicted to the blood power but no one forced him to torture Opal repeatedly for days. He even admires her stamina because she lasted longer than some of the men he tortured. How sick is that?

Opal didn't even seem to grow up much in this third book; she was still capable of rash actions that led to constant victimization that just became tiresome. It was blah blah, rush off again, betrayed again, in trouble again, everybody mad at her again. I was really interested in what was happening with the characters but kept hoping that Opal would learn some good judgment after landing herself in so many horrific plights. But Opal learning to be a little cynical is displeasing to the other characters as if her being naive and rushing off without thinking is somehow meritorious and endearing.

And did anyone else have a problem with the mother's atrocious behavior? Opal has to make these life-changing decisions like what to do if her future has no magic, attempting to regain her magic to manufacture the essential messengers only she can create, learning to infiltrate a maximum security prison, selecting a partner when she is conflicted, and figuring out what to tell the manipulative members of the powerful Committee about her strange immunity. Even one of those decisions would have been of utmost importance but Opal tries to take care of all of them before heading for home and then she is groveling for forgiveness because her mother casts her off because she is late in helping with Mara's wedding. Opal should instead have been really furious that these momentous decisions were considered of so little significance. And this treatment was part of her supposedly great family life. Maybe it was supposed to be amusing but with such a family, perhaps it's not so odd that Opal considers her torturer to be a good life partner.

There were some interesting parts in this segment: we learn more of Valek while he is teaching Opal the skills of a spy, Paszia Cloud Mist has grown up and treats Opal well while touring the family's diamond mines, the storm dancer routine is fascinating, Fisk and the Helper's Guild are equally interesting, and so is Opal's new relationship with Rees and Tre, young refugees from a brutal cultish regime.
12 people found this helpful
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Stockholm Syndrome, anybody?

I would first like to say that I'm a huge fan of Snyder. I loved her Poison series, and her new young adult sci-fi Inside Out and Outside in books. However, this series was NOT what I expected of her writing.

First of all, she uses words like "he huffed" to express annoyance far too often, and people seem to get punched in the solar plexus a lot. Maybe I just noticed because I was listening to the audio book. Either way, it was annoying.

Also, though beloved characters from the Poison series return in this, I find that Opal is a whiny, annoyingly childish girl who does everything wrong when if she'd given it a bit of thought, she could have avoided it all.

The worst part about this book was the *spoiler alert* romance with Devlin, her torturer. I was practically screaming "WTF YOU LOSER!!!" at opal the entire time. An addiction to blood magic does NOT excuse his torturing her! He still could have chosen NOT to hurt her, been a decent human being, and gotten HELP for his problems rather than take them into his own hand. But, like any abused girlfriend, she forgives his faults easily and goes and marries him. AND puts kids in his hands, like that's a safe thing to do.

I'm sorry, but I was REALLY creeped out by this book. Opal develops a serious case of Stockholm Syndrome, with no explanation as to why he's a good guy. Sure, he redeemed himself, but I still don't think that pardons him for TORTURE.

I gave this 2 stars rather than 1 because I liked the first book--Kade was the only character I really liked. I suggest reading that one and leaving it be. Or just not picking it up at all. Read Snyder's other, better, LESS CREEPY books.
12 people found this helpful
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Done with this author

I will never understand why author Maria V Snyder took her main character in the direction she did in this final book of the "glass trilogy". One would think that after being raped and tortured, a relationship with the rapist/torturer would be unwise. Funny, I don't recall the heroine of this trilogy being so witless in the first two books. What happened here? Could it have been pressure from the publisher (Harlequin), demanding that the heroine be dumbed-down to the level of her counterparts in other cheap bodice-rippers?

I have no idea. Whatever the reason was, I fear the whole "Stockholm-syndrome-as-romance-trope" has been done to death. So 1980's.

I noticed from her bio page, that Ms. Snyder has a daughter. I can't help but wonder how she would feel if her daughter made the same choice in a mate as her character, Opal Cowan, did in this book. Would she trust the (extremely trite) words out of the horse's mouth: "Changed Man" and relinquish her daughter back into his charge after the second, or would it be the third, hospital visit?

I suppose any conjecture on my part is irrelevant. However, this is the last book I will ever purchase from this author, if for no other reason than resorting to such poorly constructed, somewhat nauseating, recycled romance topes is oh-so passe. I'm now throughly convinced that she is not the author I thought she was. I guess I don't do "romances" well.
12 people found this helpful
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not for me

I did not like who the main character ended up with, I don't know if the author was trying to make her books less predictable by doing this or what, but I think it was a terrible idea for the main character to end up with the guy who tortured and raped her. This series would have been better if it would have ended at the first book, the next two are just bad
7 people found this helpful
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Terrible book

As a mother, I am mortified that Ms Snyder would go in this direction. Falling in love with your torturer/ abuser. What?!? Did she even think about the message is she sending to these young girls? People dont change that much and to blame Devlen's behavior on blood magic is a joke. Opal didnt change who she was when she had blood magic. I am sickened.
6 people found this helpful
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A deeply unsatisfying ending

I was a huge fan of Snyder's while reading the Poison trilogy, and had been very excited about this trilogy when it first began. And by and large, Storm Glass (the first book) worked for me -- while it didn't quite live up to the amazing characters, sizzling tension, and vivid settings of the earlier books, it was still a really enjoyable read for me.

But as I said in my review of Sea Glass (the second book), I finished it wishing that I had never picked it up. Not only did the book bother me in a lot of ways (especially in how it romanticizes rape and torture), it managed to cast a bad taste on the other books for me as well. When I re-read them now, I keep seeing it through that lens. Still, I picked up Spy Glass with a good amount of hope -- maybe part of Opal's path to growth and maturity needed to have the events of Sea Glass first. And instead, I read a book that fills me with anger and disgust, as at least a third of the book focuses on glorifying the rapist/torturer from Sea Glass, trying to show the reader how he is really morally, emotionally, and intellectually superior to all of the men around him, and how no one can love Opal better.

The only reason I am giving this book 2 stars instead of 1 is that the underlying plot was actually still quite good -- I just wish an author that put so much effort into showing Opal's growing strength and maturity could have stopped to think about what message that means her romantic choices are showing.

If there are other people out there who have read Sea Glass and are wondering whether to read Spy Glass, I think it comes down to this -- if the romanticism of rape and torture in Sea Glass bothered you, don't upset yourself even more by reading this one. But it didn't bother everyone who read Sea Glass, and I'm not even saying that it should have bothered everyone -- and if you're one of the people who absolutely loved Sea Glass, you will probably like Spy Glass even more. If nothing else, it does a great job of wrapping up the plot neatly.
6 people found this helpful
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Spinning circles

So, I'm all for redemption and forgiveness but I'm still puzzled as to how love (in whatever form) can possibly make you forget a history of torture and violation. Also, I thought it was a cheap shortcut to let Devlen blame all his actions on his magic/bloodlust (which he does frequently in Sea Glass). Regardless of the motivation or drive, he still tortured, traumatized, and basically raped her. It's like Yelena ending up with Reyad (from the Study series)!!!
5 people found this helpful
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Things in a Nut Shell

In all honesty I think that the Glass Magician trilogy should have ended at Sea Glass. I thought that how book 2 ended was much more satisfying than Spy Glass' ending.

Spy Glass in my opinion starts off painfully slow in comparison than the other two books of this series. There where certain mini-stories I guess you could call them that Maria Snyder started to touch but never truely explained or finished them. She left them unfinished which some of them could have been left unfinished but there where others that weren't. It also felt jumpy and didn't flow like the first two.

There where many personality changes in this last novel. Opal's personality has changed a great deal compared to the first two books for better or for worst I can't say. All I can say is that I don't agree with this new Opal. She just doesn't feel like the Opal we have come to know in the last two novels. Also, a few of the other characters such as Yelena's personality has also changed. I also felt a few others changed as well (I know that characters personalities can changed these changed for the worst. It is difficult to explain without giving spoilers.)

The whole love triangle was under done, it could have flowed better since it was totally one sided. The ending was also too predictable or at least in my opinion it was.

To sum things up... I would have rather borrowed this last book instead of buying it. It has changed my outlook on the series. The first two books I have read multiple times... I'm still trying to figure out what I want to do with this one.
4 people found this helpful
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3.5 Stars - It sets a frantic pace, but the ending should satisfy longtime fans

Plot Summary: Opal Cowan has been through so much, it's hard to believe that she's barely an adult. In Sea Glass, Opal had to sacrifice all her power in order to stop the blood magicians, and now she's lost her purpose in life. She doesn't want to work with glass anymore, the Council is angry that she's lost her ability to make the magical glass messengers, and work is keeping her boyfriend, Kade, far away. When Opal learns that some of her stolen blood may fall into the wrong hands, she heads off alone with the newly kindled hope that she can regain her lost powers.

(GLASS SERIES: BOOK THREE)

I am a long-time fan of Maria V. Snyder's easy-to-read fantasies. Her stories have the right mix of action, magic, and romance, and even when I don't love her books, I'd be hard pressed to put them down mid-read. That's the case with Spy Glass, which started off on a downer note since our heroine, Opal, is too depressed to do much of anything. It's sad to see someone lose their passion, and Opal can barely stand to walk into a glass factory now that she's lost her ability to infuse glass with magic.

Fortunately Opal doesn't remain down in the dumps for long, and she hatches an ambitious plan to question the men who siphoned blood from her, but they're in a secured prison that doesn't allow visitors. From here the story moves from adventure to adventure with little pause, and Opal traverses the make-believe country of Sitia so many times that I lost count. That's one of the strengths of Ms. Snyder's stories, and perhaps a weakness too, because there's no chance to get bored, but sometimes I wish the action would stay in one location a bit longer.

I think the love triangle that emerges will be a bit controversial with fans, especially since Opal and Kade's relationship feels so established. I won't say who she ends up with, but there is a new complication that could make fans happy or sad, depending on which guy they like best.

The Glass Series is a spin-off from Ms. Snyder's wonderful Study Series, and I highly recommend starting with the Study Series first, which is no hardship, since I thoroughly enjoyed book one, [[ASIN:0778327116 Poison Study]] (five stars in my opinion). Here is the reading order for the Glass Series:

[[ASIN:0778325644 Storm Glass (Glass, Book 1)]]
[[ASIN:0778325806 Sea Glass (Glass, Book 2)]]
Spy Glass
4 people found this helpful