![]() His entire personality feels like a mirror – he acts differently depending on who he interacts with. ![]() Now that I have actually finished the book, I know why. And then he would walk through kingdoms and read letters and I just. (I know, it’s sacrilegious, right?) But each time I start this book, I just read about Kell’s coat and the Stone’s Throw and the idiot magic fanatic who Kell pisses off. I don’t know what it is about it, but every time I picked it up, it was like this fog came over my brain and each time I care less and less about Kell. This is the fourth time that I have started this book. But interesting because if I wasn’t buddy reading this book, or if it hadn’t been chosen as my ‘must-read’ friend pick, or if I hadn’t promised myself that I would finally find out what all the hype was about if it killed me, then I would have DNF’ed it AGAIN. And unfortunately I don’t mean that it’s interesting because of the gripping plot twists. This was… one of the most interesting books I’ve read for a while. White London – where people fight to control the remaining magic and magic fights back. ![]() Red London – where magic is revered, and where Kell was raised alongside the heir to the empire. There’s Grey London, without magic and ruled by the mad King George III. Kell is one of the last travellers – magicians with a rare ability to travel between parallel universes connected by one magical city. A Darker Shade of Magic (Shades of Magic #1) blurb: ![]()
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