![]() ![]() A large part of this is that the book is just fun and engaging, as the plot picks up very quickly and is full of both heavy drama and frivolous comedy. I greatly enjoyed Lady Midnight, that I will say outright. ![]() Of course, as Midnight and the rest of its trilogy are separate from The Mortal Instruments, so the only problem new readers may have is getting used to the politics, words, and technicalities of the Shadowhunter universe itself. However, I suspect that a great majority of prospective Midnight readers are already familiar with said writing and universe, so this should not be a problem. ![]() I personally had no problems in getting invested in the novel, but that may be due to the fact that I am already a huge fan of Clare’s writing and Shadowhunter universe. With exactly 720 pages, it took me, a rather fast reader with a terrible penchant and skill for procrastinating, approximately a week to complete. ![]() Lady Midnight is by no standards an average length book. Midnight is set four to five years after the conclusion of Heavenly Fire, thus the age differences from Heavenly Fire. Midnight is primarily told through the points of view of Emma Carstairs, who is 17, and Julian, also 17, and Mark Blackthorn, 21, although other characters do have parts devoted to them. Lady Midnight, as with the upcoming two books in The Dark Artifices, continues the story of characters first introduced in City of Heavenly Fire, the final installment in The Mortal Instruments. ![]()
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