A Court of Thorns and Roses Paperback Box Set (5 books) (A Court of Thorns and Roses, 9)

A Court of Thorns and Roses Paperback Box Set (5 books) (A Court of Thorns and Roses, 9)

4.8 out of 5

26,559 global ratings

All five of the Court of Thorns and Roses hardcovers with the new series look in a luxe box set perfect for the holiday season.

Passionate, violent, sexy and daring ... A true page-turner - USA TODAY on A Court of Thorns and Roses

Feyre is a huntress. The skin of a wolf would bring enough gold to feed her sisters for a month. But the life of a magical creature comes at a steep price, and Feyre has just killed the wrong wolf ...

Follow Feyre's journey into the dangerous, alluring world of the Fae, where she will lose her heart, face her demons, and learn what she is truly capable of.

The world expands in A Court of Silver Flames with the story of Feyre's fiery sister, Nesta.

This stunning, five-book box set of the #1 New York Times bestselling series by Sarah J. Maas includes A Court of Thorns and Roses, A Court of Mist and Fury, A Court of Wings and Ruin, A Court of Frost and Starlight, and A Court of Silver Flames.


About the authors

Sarah J. Maas

Sarah J. Maas

Sarah J. Maas is the #1 New York Times and internationally bestselling author of the Crescent City, A Court of Thorns and Roses, and the Throne of Glass series. Her books have sold more than twelve million copies and are published in thirty-seven languages. A New York native, Sarah lives in Philadelphia with her husband, son, and dog. To find out more, visit sarahjmaas.com or follow @therealsjmaas on Instagram.

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Reviews

Amazon Customer

Amazon Customer

5

Amazing series!

Reviewed in the United States on May 9, 2024

Verified Purchase

First off, the bundle is great as it is cheaper to purchase this way. If you’re trying to get back into reading this is a great choice! It is Romantasy (Romance/Fantasy). It is a great blend of both. The writing is excellent, the way the author lines up the events with the overarching plot is clever and fun. The first book is slow moving but that’s due to it focusing on world building and getting to know the main character. The book speeds up at the end and gets intense which leaves you primed up for book 2. By far book 2 and 5 are my favorites. As you read book 2, you discover so much more about the world and are just as in awe as the main character. Book 3 is really intense including a war and mostly focused on character development and learning about other courts which was interesting. Book 4 is what Booktok calls the “Christmas Special”. It’s honestly a gem. It focuses on their version of Christmas which is Winter Solstice. It’s the shortest in the series and what makes it a gem is that you get to see the characters happy for a bit. I know when I watch tv shows or read books, when there’s a lot of mayhem all the time, I’m always craving a little happiness or stillness to see the characters living normally and not focused on the next problem, so I am grateful book 4 exists. As I mentioned before the author is great at planting events or tid bits of information into the storyline that will be used later. As the characters are happy in book 4, the author sets up the next book with bits of information that sparks curiosity about a certain character. When you get to book 5, you are hooked and curious to find out what’s been going on with said character and get to explore that character a lot more.

Well there you it! I tried to not be too specific or give any spoilers! I hope you’ll read this series! It’s worth it!

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20 people found this helpful

Anthony m Tarantino

Anthony m Tarantino

5

Can’t put this series down.

Reviewed in the United States on May 10, 2024

Verified Purchase

A Court of Thorns and Roses has left me spellbound and yearning for more! This book is a masterful blend of fantasy, romance, and adventure, with a strong and complex heroine at its core. The world-building is exquisite, with a richly detailed and immersive environment that transports you to the land of Prythian.

The characters are multidimensional and relatable, with Feyre's journey from human to faerie being both heart-wrenching and empowering. The slow-burn romance is expertly crafted, making the wait well worth it. The plot twists and turns, keeping you on the edge of your seat, and the writing is beautiful and evocative.

If you're a fan of fantasy, romance, or just great storytelling, do yourself a favor and dive into this captivating series. Be prepared to lose sleep, forget meals, and become completely entranced by the world of Prythian and its beloved characters.

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6 people found this helpful

Kat

Kat

5

Great fantasy series, not feminist literature.

Reviewed in the United States on December 9, 2023

Verified Purchase

If you like spicy romance novels and you like high fantasy novels, you will like this series. It is an adult series for adult themes and adult scenes, not just spice, but also gore/war/torture, and that is important to note. This series has its own magic system and mythologies, and is connected to other universes of the author including Crescent City and Throne of Glass but can be read on its own. I think it is a really good series.

SPOILERS (not heavy spoilers but will talk about things which happen in the book in a general sense) for conversation about feminism/fascism/mental illness.

Many people want a high fantasy series which is feminist in nature and the male love interests are feminist, this is not that kind of book. It definitely has feminist undertones and female empowerment undertones, it is written by a female author which historically high-fantasy books in a female lens have been shunned so I prefer to support female authors, but the love interest does many things which are not feminist.

The male love interest in this book drugs her and dances inappropriately with her, and then claims there was no other way to make the villain think he didn’t care about the protagonist and put her in danger. That is pretty unbelievable, there are a million other options that do not include drugging someone in that situation.

The male love interest “rescues” the protagonist and brings her to a place which only his friends and family, for hundreds of years of relational ties, are. This technically is a social isolation happening. This is apparent when 5 books later the love interest is not only still lying to the protagonist, but getting all the friends and family to lie for him about something that directly and drastically affects her life. She technically is supposed to be the same level of power that he is, but it is very clear that was a stunt to show symbolically how much he cared for her. Because if she truly had the same power as him then the friends and family would not have lied like that, the same way they would not have lied to him. The other thing about that is she was raised to her status without any well learned political or historical education of the people she is ruling, giving the male love interest good reason to be able to over-ride anything she put into place, and not giving her enough knowledge to truly do her job. What also goes along with this is that all education on those political historical topics will have to come through him or people whom he is employing/has these strong ties with.

There is a race of people which the love interest rules over who are physically and sexually abusing females, and neglecting/abusing their male children to be warriors. The love interest claims to have put laws into place to prevent this, however, he does not enforce them. Similar to how he symbolically gave the protagonist a position of power, he seemed to have symbolically put a feminist law into place but then not follow through. It is claimed the abuse they are facing is culture, and to give the males more time to change, which is obviously untrue and harmful. “He will change” rhetoric harms women often. I think the way the fantasy race and issue of female violence was written was realistic, but I also think that realism is disturbing because of his unwillingness to be harsher in punishment towards males who are literally physically altering these females. It also is somewhat insinuated there is fascism going on because of his obsession with keeping one “good” city safe, and his distaste for the sexist race of warriors and the other city - which he oversees and is in charge of. It is almost like he believes their lives lost causes and something to be used to protect his favorite city and people, which is obviously harmful to the people who do not live in his favorite city because their ruler has abandoned them to harm in belief of culture.

Again, this is a fantasy book, I do not believe this to reflect the authors beliefs on feminism or humanitarian efforts, but if you personally are looking for a high-fantasy book with a feminist love interest, this is probably not the one.

Lastly, the last book has a topic of mental illness- specifically substance use issues. This book was so difficult to read as a researcher in psychology because of the abuse the protagonist faced and how she got better despite, in real life, this person would likely be far worse off. What I mean by this is the protagonist was unliked due to a disability she had in childhood, inadaptibility which is something that happens in children groomed to be married off (groomed meaning taught to be something very specific, particularly in a way of being sold to the highest bidder and marrying a wealthy male). Her sister took her meaning for life by marrying someone powerful and rich without any of the efforts and grooming which the protagonist faced in childhood, so all her trauma no longer had meaning and she no longer felt any reason to be alive. After this she developed an addiction to alcohol and began sexual risk taking behaviors. What her family did was ridicule and shame her but also enable her with money. Shame results in a cycle of wanting pleasure, so doing this was worsening her behavior. After the family got fed up with her wasting money, instead of setting boundaries and no longer buying alcohol, they threatened her life, took away her autonomy, verbally and emotionally abused her, isolated her, and then the person in charge of helping her developed a sexual relationship with her (which is supposed to be romantic but when she already struggled with risky sexual behaviors, this was taking advantage of her). On top it, a scene occurs where she essentially is noted as suicidal, and instead of helping her he continues to be short, rude, and mean to her and forced her to hike (???). And this was because she pointed out a lie which the whole family was keeping from her sister by her love interest, so the protagonist of this book was being punished for giving information which her sister had a right to know. It is just so incredibly hard to read.

Of course, these people do not have psychology or mental wellness, however, I think the part I take most issue with is the unrealistic fact she gets better. Because this is a popular series I would also be concerned with people taking the idea that this sort of behavior towards someone mentally ill is romantic or okay in any way shape or form. This is fantasy, most people know that, but I feel compelled to state it anyway.



Overall: I do like the books, I like the writing style, I even do not mind many of the character flaws and the big issues I mentioned occurring, it adds to moral/ethical calamity and makes you question who is the real villain or hero. But, I have seen people stating that this is a more feminist style high fantasy romance and I just wanted to point all the reasons I do not believe that to be the case.

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165 people found this helpful

Jillian

Jillian

5

For those who enjoy a good story.

Reviewed in the United States on April 11, 2024

Verified Purchase

I know this series is marked as spicy. It’s not as spicy as you would think. Very tame really. The story is what makes this series so popular. It has amazing male and female characters, a wide variety of them. The story keeps you interested and entertained the entire time with very little filler. The filler that does exist has a purpose and leads into the story. It’s really well written and thought out and none of the characters blend into one another. The writing from each perspective truly feels like individual perspective. If you’re looking for an intriguing and long series this is the one for you. It took me about a month of spare time to finish the entirety of it so it’s not too crazy long.

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25 people found this helpful

Heather Shay

Heather Shay

5

Perfect

Reviewed in the United States on May 23, 2024

Verified Purchase

I loved every bit of this series. Sassy and sexy but also riveting and emotional. Beautiful, timeless stories.

So many of the answers are simple, but not easy.

Kat

Kat

5

Great fantasy series, not feminist literature.

Reviewed in the United States on December 9, 2023

Verified Purchase

If you like spicy romance novels and you like high fantasy novels, you will like this series. It is an adult series for adult themes and adult scenes, not just spice, but also gore/war/torture, and that is important to note. This series has its own magic system and mythologies, and is connected to other universes of the author including Crescent City and Throne of Glass but can be read on its own. I think it is a really good series.

SPOILERS (not heavy spoilers but will talk about things which happen in the book in a general sense) for conversation about feminism/fascism/mental illness.

Many people want a high fantasy series which is feminist in nature and the male love interests are feminist, this is not that kind of book. It definitely has feminist undertones and female empowerment undertones, it is written by a female author which historically high-fantasy books in a female lens have been shunned so I prefer to support female authors, but the love interest does many things which are not feminist.

The male love interest in this book drugs her and dances inappropriately with her, and then claims there was no other way to make the villain think he didn’t care about the protagonist and put her in danger. That is pretty unbelievable, there are a million other options that do not include drugging someone in that situation.

The male love interest “rescues” the protagonist and brings her to a place which only his friends and family, for hundreds of years of relational ties, are. This technically is a social isolation happening. This is apparent when 5 books later the love interest is not only still lying to the protagonist, but getting all the friends and family to lie for him about something that directly and drastically affects her life. She technically is supposed to be the same level of power that he is, but it is very clear that was a stunt to show symbolically how much he cared for her. Because if she truly had the same power as him then the friends and family would not have lied like that, the same way they would not have lied to him. The other thing about that is she was raised to her status without any well learned political or historical education of the people she is ruling, giving the male love interest good reason to be able to over-ride anything she put into place, and not giving her enough knowledge to truly do her job. What also goes along with this is that all education on those political historical topics will have to come through him or people whom he is employing/has these strong ties with.

There is a race of people which the love interest rules over who are physically and sexually abusing females, and neglecting/abusing their male children to be warriors. The love interest claims to have put laws into place to prevent this, however, he does not enforce them. Similar to how he symbolically gave the protagonist a position of power, he seemed to have symbolically put a feminist law into place but then not follow through. It is claimed the abuse they are facing is culture, and to give the males more time to change, which is obviously untrue and harmful. “He will change” rhetoric harms women often. I think the way the fantasy race and issue of female violence was written was realistic, but I also think that realism is disturbing because of his unwillingness to be harsher in punishment towards males who are literally physically altering these females. It also is somewhat insinuated there is fascism going on because of his obsession with keeping one “good” city safe, and his distaste for the sexist race of warriors and the other city - which he oversees and is in charge of. It is almost like he believes their lives lost causes and something to be used to protect his favorite city and people, which is obviously harmful to the people who do not live in his favorite city because their ruler has abandoned them to harm in belief of culture.

Again, this is a fantasy book, I do not believe this to reflect the authors beliefs on feminism or humanitarian efforts, but if you personally are looking for a high-fantasy book with a feminist love interest, this is probably not the one.

Lastly, the last book has a topic of mental illness- specifically substance use issues. This book was so difficult to read as a researcher in psychology because of the abuse the protagonist faced and how she got better despite, in real life, this person would likely be far worse off. What I mean by this is the protagonist was unliked due to a disability she had in childhood, inadaptibility which is something that happens in children groomed to be married off (groomed meaning taught to be something very specific, particularly in a way of being sold to the highest bidder and marrying a wealthy male). Her sister took her meaning for life by marrying someone powerful and rich without any of the efforts and grooming which the protagonist faced in childhood, so all her trauma no longer had meaning and she no longer felt any reason to be alive. After this she developed an addiction to alcohol and began sexual risk taking behaviors. What her family did was ridicule and shame her but also enable her with money. Shame results in a cycle of wanting pleasure, so doing this was worsening her behavior. After the family got fed up with her wasting money, instead of setting boundaries and no longer buying alcohol, they threatened her life, took away her autonomy, verbally and emotionally abused her, isolated her, and then the person in charge of helping her developed a sexual relationship with her (which is supposed to be romantic but when she already struggled with risky sexual behaviors, this was taking advantage of her). On top it, a scene occurs where she essentially is noted as suicidal, and instead of helping her he continues to be short, rude, and mean to her and forced her to hike (???). And this was because she pointed out a lie which the whole family was keeping from her sister by her love interest, so the protagonist of this book was being punished for giving information which her sister had a right to know. It is just so incredibly hard to read.

Of course, these people do not have psychology or mental wellness, however, I think the part I take most issue with is the unrealistic fact she gets better. Because this is a popular series I would also be concerned with people taking the idea that this sort of behavior towards someone mentally ill is romantic or okay in any way shape or form. This is fantasy, most people know that, but I feel compelled to state it anyway.



Overall: I do like the books, I like the writing style, I even do not mind many of the character flaws and the big issues I mentioned occurring, it adds to moral/ethical calamity and makes you question who is the real villain or hero. But, I have seen people stating that this is a more feminist style high fantasy romance and I just wanted to point all the reasons I do not believe that to be the case.

Read more

172 people found this helpful

Ronleigh

Ronleigh

5

Nesta was a diamond in the rough

Reviewed in the United States on June 1, 2024

Verified Purchase

Nestas story was one I wasn’t excited to read about but buying the bundle I felt I had to at least see if the start of the book was going to grab me, and it didn’t disappoint. I loved Cassian, so I really wanted to see if he would get his HEA if not with Nesta. The power and energy of not giving up on Nesta and Nesta soaking up everything that was thrown at her was enough to encourage anyone who reads this book into “keep going and you’ll conquer anything”. There were a lot of sad parts in this book but they paved the way for the light at the end of the tunnel. I have to say I was so very surprised by this book and so glad I read it, it definitely inspired me to get back to my fitness. Go on and read it, you’ll feel like you’re there with Nesta in training and see her grow into the person she was always meant to be.

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Fae’s Finds

Fae’s Finds

5

Breathtaking - Bothe The Series & The Boxset

Reviewed in the United States on June 4, 2024

Verified Purchase

I want to preface by saying that these books (all of them including the box for them) survived a house fire with MINIMAL damage, last year in October due to unfortunate electric issues. A Court of Silver Flames was lying on my coffee table when chaos ensued & I unfortunately wasn’t able to grab it, the others were in the boxset. The only one that took “horrible” damage was ACOSF & even then it’s a bit of smoke / ash damage & makes the book like SOOOO cool & on theme. Luckily, I was able to retrieve all of my copies (along with others) and I finally finished the series. The books are amazing, my first “adult” fantasy series & I’m hooked. I found the first book at my public high school library (poor librarian had no clue) & when the hype began on BookTok I went ahead & purchased the full series. Beautiful. Also if the review wasn’t enough, the quality on these is top tier!

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CowgirlBuilt

CowgirlBuilt

5

100X yes

Reviewed in the United States on May 10, 2024

Verified Purchase

Physical Quality: My fave series so once available in a set I had to order, now I don't ever suggest amazon for books and they don't take care of them but this set was not shipped from amazon (brilliant on the sellers behalf) and was extremely well packaged. One small corner on one book jacket was bent out of place but the rest were perfection. Thank you so much!

Story: Trigger warnings galore in just about every instance but such an amazing imagination on the writers behalf. A whirl wind of emotions on this one. My first time reading through by book three I felt it was off course and I should have stopped after 2 but I continued because I needed to know. I went back later to reread and found myself adoring the additional stories and am glad I didn't write it off initially. If you're a fan of emotional smutty fantasy these will quickly become a favorite.

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Amazon Customer

Amazon Customer

5

Amazing series!

Reviewed in the United States on May 9, 2024

Verified Purchase

First off, the bundle is great as it is cheaper to purchase this way. If you’re trying to get back into reading this is a great choice! It is Romantasy (Romance/Fantasy). It is a great blend of both. The writing is excellent, the way the author lines up the events with the overarching plot is clever and fun. The first book is slow moving but that’s due to it focusing on world building and getting to know the main character. The book speeds up at the end and gets intense which leaves you primed up for book 2. By far book 2 and 5 are my favorites. As you read book 2, you discover so much more about the world and are just as in awe as the main character. Book 3 is really intense including a war and mostly focused on character development and learning about other courts which was interesting. Book 4 is what Booktok calls the “Christmas Special”. It’s honestly a gem. It focuses on their version of Christmas which is Winter Solstice. It’s the shortest in the series and what makes it a gem is that you get to see the characters happy for a bit. I know when I watch tv shows or read books, when there’s a lot of mayhem all the time, I’m always craving a little happiness or stillness to see the characters living normally and not focused on the next problem, so I am grateful book 4 exists. As I mentioned before the author is great at planting events or tid bits of information into the storyline that will be used later. As the characters are happy in book 4, the author sets up the next book with bits of information that sparks curiosity about a certain character. When you get to book 5, you are hooked and curious to find out what’s been going on with said character and get to explore that character a lot more.

Well there you it! I tried to not be too specific or give any spoilers! I hope you’ll read this series! It’s worth it!

Read more

28 people found this helpful