CBR Passport Challenge: Books Recommended by Friends
This is the second book in a trilogy. It doesn’t really make sense if you’ve not read the series from the beginning. So if you’re not caught up, go read A Deadly Education. It’s great, I’ll wait.
El and Orion are now seniors in the Scholomance, and they have absolutely no way of knowing if their very dangerous mission just before graduation to fix the furnaces worked. Did they manage to clear the graduation hall of the majority of maleficaria ahead of the former senior class’ exit, or did all the graduates get horribly eaten? Is the machinery going to fail before their own graduation in a year’s time, or will this be a problem for one of the classes at some point in the future?
El, who has spent her entire life as a loner, is surprised to find that she has actual friends and allies in the school and that despite having criticised Orion for a year for risking his life to save others, she is now almost daily expending a ton of magic trying to keep the freshmen students she shares a classroom with from being killed by mals. Orion, on the other hand, is getting more and more frustrated. Despite trying to hunt down mals in his spare time, there don’t appear to really be any, except for all the ones coming to try to kill El, and those directly around her.
El spends the first six months of her senior year trying to pass her exams, keep Orion from getting killed because he keeps neglecting his own studies and fend off all the vicious threats that the school seems intent on sending her way. She also can’t forget that while the cleaning furnaces hopefully killed off a lot of mals pre-graduation last year, there’s still a whole year for the graduation hall to fill up again, and she and her fellow seniors need to train incessantly to make sure they’re in good shape to fight the monsters and make it out alive. The graduating class is much bigger than it has ever been, thanks to Orion’s tireless efforts for the past three years of killing mals and rescuing people. Normally, only about half of any given year’s graduates get out. Will the added numbers of seniors mean more likely survivors or just an even higher death toll come graduation day since there is no way for everyone to make it to the doors unharmed? Or is there?
Full review here.