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Fantasy

A Court of Thorns and Roses

2 stories #1 by 0 4.0/5

by Sarah J. Maas

About the book

A Court of Thorns and Roses (Sarah J. Maas) is a fantasy romance about Feyre Archeron, a 19-year-old huntress who kills a wolf in the woods and is taken as punishment to the faerie realm of Prythian. There, she discovers her captor is Tamlin, a powerful High Fae, and she’s pulled into a beautiful but dangerous world shaped by court politics and a dark curse threatening everything.

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chill out escape reality geek out feel suspense laugh out loud delve into fantasy experience adventure
January 14, 2026
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When One Recommendation Changes Everything

I’ll never forget the day I walked into a bookstore, craving fantasy. I was looking for something with fae, as a Tolkien fan, so I asked the bookseller what she’d recommend. With a sparkle in her eye and without hesitation, she pointed me to this series. And I’m grateful to her every single time I sink back into Sarah J. Maas’s worlds. I’ve read the series about five times now. Interestingly, the first book didn’t blow me away at first. It reminded me of “Beauty and the Beast,” so I started it a bit skeptical. But I quickly realized it was only a prologue to something much bigger: a gorgeous, jaw dropping fantasy where I found my bookish “found family.” This isn’t just any random fantasy. Beyond the fun, the brilliantly built world, and all the sarcasm and irony, it has real depth. And the second book is a work of art. I wholeheartedly recommend it. I read it during a very difficult time in my life, filled with painful emotions, disappointments, and suffering. The whole series became a truly important part of my life, and in a way, a kind of therapy.

January 16, 2026
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My life needed some fantasy

I hadn’t read a really good fantasy series in a long time. Somehow I just stopped making space for it. The moment I started working as a software engineer, my life became work, work, work. Deadlines. Tickets. Late evenings. And that annoying feeling that there’s always something to fix, optimize, ship, or learn. Even when I wasn’t working, my brain was still on. Then I met my girlfriend. And she’s the type of person who doesn’t just “like” a book. She’s obsessed in the best way. She had already read A Court of Thorns and Roses like five or six times. She knew every vibe, every moment, every character. And at some point she basically looked at me and said: “You’re reading this.” No debate. So I started. And yeah, the beginning was slower than I expected. But I kept going. And then… it clicked. The world started opening up, everything got bigger, and suddenly I wasn’t thinking about work at all. I was fully in it. I kept saying “one more chapter” and then I’d check the time and it was 2AM. And honestly? It was worth it. This book reminded me of something I forgot: life needs more fantasy. Not even as an escape. More like a reset. A reminder that my brain doesn’t have to be in problem-solving mode 24/7. That I can just enjoy something. Get lost in a story. Feel that excitement again.