My Rating: 2.5 hearts
Thoughts on the Novel: The Girl at Midnight by Melissa Grey was a
book that I was really looking forward to reading. Unfortunately, while I found
it entertaining due to its fast pace, the plot reminded me far too much of that
of Laini Taylor’s Daughter of Smoke and Bone. The characters in The Girl at
Midnight could have also been more fleshed out.
The protagonist of The Girl at Midnight, Echo, is a human girl who ran away from home, and is adopted by the Avicen. A
skilled thief, Echo – whose appearance is never really described so you can’t picture her – is tasked to find proof that a) the mythical firebird from Avicen lore exists, and
b) its location. Echo isn’t the only looking for the firebird though; Caius, a Drakharin,
is too. Whichever species finds the firebird first gets to permanently decide
how to end the war between the Avicen and the Drakharin.
At first, even though Echo and Caius's star-crossed attraction reminded me a bit of the attraction between Karou and Akiva,
especially with Echo running around as an errand girl for another species, I wasn't too concerned.
There were differences in plot; and at the time, I was more worried about the
potential development of a love triangle because Echo already had an Avicen
boyfriend. The ending, however, appears to be completely ripped off from Daughter of Smoke and
Bone!
The Girl of Midnight resembles Cassandra Clare's The
Mortal Instruments (a series I haven't read, but have read lots of
reviews and spoilers for) in some aspects as well. Although I wasn’t invested in the attraction between
Echo and Caius, I was interested in a romance potentially developing between
Dorian, Caius’ guard who harbours unrequited feelings for Caius, and Jasper, an
Avicen. Doesn’t that sound
a lot like Alec and Magnus though?
Another issue that I had with The Girl at Midnight was that the characters’ backstories could have been better
developed. We’re given pieces of information about their past, but this
information never appears important; it’s almost as if the characters’ pasts
should just be glossed over. For example, we know that the main reason Caius wants
the firebird is so that he can end the war through peaceful means rather than
through violence because he was once in love with an Avicen who was then burned to death by Caius' twin
sister, Tanith. What remains unclear though is how a Dragon Prince managed to meet an Avicen not just once, but multiple times in
secret, and how Tanith found out about their relationship.
I’m not sure if I’ll read the sequel to The Girl at Midnight, but if I
do, I hope the sequel will be more original and have better
characterization.
The Girl at Midnight will be released on April 28, 2015 by Delacorte Press.
In exchange for an honest review, this book was received from the publisher (Random House) for free via NetGalley.