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Series: The Circle Series (Book 3)
Genre: Adult Fantasy
Publisher: Thomas Nelson; Anniversary edition (February 3, 2012)
Page Count: 528 pages
Though this isn’t my favorite series ever, I still want to continue it and finish it cause I don’t DNF. Red is probably my favorite of the series, but White still had its uniqueness.
The Plot: Things are finally coming to a head in both worlds. A lot of what’s going on in the future is similar to Christians after Jesus ascended into heaven. Then the world is seemingly coming to an end on the present day earth. The story seemed to shift from an adventure to romance though because most of the book revolves around Thomas’s love for Chelise. By the end of this book, I thought the overall story came to a satisfying ending.
The Characters: I still have had a hard time connecting with the characters. I mean I understand them and they’re well written but I just couldn’t make a very good connection with them. Writing this review months later all I can remember is that I hated Woref and I didn’t like that Thomas didn’t have much of a relationship with his kids it seemed. They were just there and they don’t really do anything until the next book.
The Setting: Since Thomas and the rest of the members of the Circle live in the desert, that setting is very prominent. The more interesting setting was the Forests since the Hoard and the “Halfbreeds” who were once foresters have now merged cultures so they’ve created a conglomeration of a religion, acknowledging both Teeleh and Elyon, which made for some interesting dynamics.
Epic Things: The dreaming as different people is of course very cool and the Books of History make for some very interesting happenings in the plot.
The Theme: Sacrifice is the biggest theme.
Content Cautions: There wasn’t any content that stuck out to me in particular. It has some violence and features a physically abusive man but that’s it.
What We Can Take Away For Our Writing:
Giving the Story a Device that Allows the Author to Retcon – This book introduces the blank Books of History which allow someone to actually write out events to how they want them to happen. This allows the writer to back himself out of a corner he wrote himself into in the last book. This device seemed a little gimmicky in this book though it does play an interesting part in the next book.
Conclusion: Not my favorite book, but it still held my interest throughout.
About the Author: