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[J736.Ebook] Free PDF The Iron Traitor (The Iron Fey Book 6), by Julie Kagawa

Free PDF The Iron Traitor (The Iron Fey Book 6), by Julie Kagawa

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The Iron Traitor (The Iron Fey Book 6), by Julie Kagawa

The Iron Traitor (The Iron Fey Book 6), by Julie Kagawa



The Iron Traitor (The Iron Fey Book 6), by Julie Kagawa

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The Iron Traitor (The Iron Fey Book 6), by Julie Kagawa

IN THE REAL WORLD, WHEN YOU VANISH INTO THIN AIR FOR A WEEK, PEOPLE TEND TO NOTICE�

After his unexpected journey into the lands of the fey, Ethan Chase just wants to get back to normal. Well, as "normal" as you can be when you see faeries every day of your life. Suddenly the former loner with the bad reputation has someone to try for—his girlfriend, Kenzie. Never mind that he's forbidden to see her again. �

But when your name is Ethan Chase and your sister is one of the most powerful faeries in the Nevernever, "normal" simply isn't to be. For Ethan's nephew, Keirran, is missing, and may be on the verge of doing something unthinkable in the name of saving his own love. Something that will fracture the human and faery worlds forever, and give rise to the dangerous fey known as the Forgotten. As Ethan's and Keirran's fates entwine and Keirran slips further into darkness, Ethan's next choice may decide the fate of them all.�

THE IRON FEY

  • Sales Rank: #82260 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2013-11-01
  • Released on: 2013-10-29
  • Format: Kindle eBook

From School Library Journal
Gr 8 Up-Try as he might, Ethan Chase cannot escape the Fey. They kidnapped him as a child and now, at 18, he has been pulled back into the Nevernever, a realm he hoped never to see again. His previously unknown half-fey nephew has disappeared, and Ethan may be the only one who can locate him. Unaware of the prophecy foretelling his death at Kierran's hands (which is why his sister tried to keep the two apart), Ethan agrees to help Kierran find a way to save his love, Annwyl, from fading out of existence. When forays into dark magic fail to do anything more than prolong Annwyl's fate, their quest leads them deep into the Summer and Winter realms on an adventure that could mean death for them both. Once again, Kagawa utilizes forbidden love to drive her heroes into dangerous and unfamiliar territory. With Ethan's prophesied death looming over the story, readers will find themselves continuously on the edges of their seats. "Iron Fey" fans will revel in the reappearance of familiar characters and new readers will be drawn deep into a new and dangerous world. The final pages will leave readers breathlessly awaiting the next volume. Recommended for libraries owning previous titles in the series.-Jessica Miller, West Springfield Public Library, MAα(c) Copyright 2013. Library Journal. LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

From Booklist
When 17-year-old Ethan returns from finding his sister, the Iron Queen, in the complex and compelling Invisible World Kagawa has created in the Iron Fey series, he finds that his new, fully mortal girlfriend, Kenzie, is hospitalized, thanks to the leukemia that has weakened her immune system. In spite of Kenzie’s father’s sharp warning against Ethan in her life and pushed by the appearance of Ethan’s nephew’s true love, who is also in a weakened state, Ethan and Kenzie return to the fey realm to find Kierran and help him restore his love’s life force. Kagawa never loses the pace or character development of her imaginative tale, and readers will be both absorbed and satisfied with the twists, turns, and gender politics of this latest episode. Grades 8-12. --Francisca Goldsmith

Review
"...Readers won't want it to end." -Kirkus Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews

20 of 24 people found the following review helpful.
The story is good...the characters not so much.
By BookGeek
I am not a fan of stories like ALICE IN WONDERLAND. You know, "let's fall down the rabbit hole to a dangerous and wonderful place ...and oh! A strange, but interesting creature that's here to help or harm us for absolutely no reason!" Those kinds of stories. The IRON FEY series is like that and now it's spin-off series has a similar vein. The difference between Alice and Ethan Chase is that I care about him beyond the fact that something weird happens to him. He's a kid who has been dragged into the faery world and they will not let him go. No matter where he turns, Fae are always there to force him into chaos.

I enjoyed most of this book, I did, but the glaring lack of character conviction and the blatant manipulation by the author makes it impossible for me to give it a high rating. There is no real true heart or emotion in this book. It's all talk and because it's all talk I have an issue with the ending. Characters make huge choices. End of the world, war between all fey, kind of choices and I don't believe it. They do it for love, but none of the relationships feel genuine to me. It's all author desires and no true evidence on the page. Kagawa tells us they are in love, but never shows us and the showing is what gives us emotional entanglements to story and character.
My biggest issue with IRON TRAITOR is that the female characters are there as a beacon for the real characters to focus their love and are useless beyond that. I call Ethan, Keirran, and even Mr. Chase "real," because they are well rounded characters who have clear desires, motivations and their presence has a real influence on the plot. The girls on the other hand are there to give their male counter parts heart. Annwyl is weak and pathetic, admittedly she has a reason in this book, but she was the same in THE LOST PRINCE. She is always a step behind in figuring out what's happening and she is constantly overly grateful for the fact that people care about her. Keirran's every step is to save her and she claims to care, but she neither fights for her life or relinquishes it to save Keirran from ruining his life in his desire to save her.
Kenzie is a formulaic `I am woman' character who always stomps her foot in feminist rage when Ethan wants her to stay home, but contributes nothing for 90% of the book. Literally, Kenzie has a scene in the beginning where she successfully negotiates with the Fey, but spends the rest of the book hiding behind rocks or getting Ethan injured in his role as her protector. Ethan comes out the romantic hero in his vow to step in front of a dragon to save Kenzie, while she is the annoying busy body who is risking both their lives just so she can say it was her choice. Add to that Ethan's mom who comes off as an irrational child of a parent while her husband is not only rational, but also understanding with a dash of support and you have a book with useless females.
It's amazing to me that the woman who created the awesome
Allison Sekemoto, created these women. It was almost like writing a book from a close minded male.
Kagawa's relationships would be more interesting if she actually gave us love stories. In all three of her series, characters are in "love," but I don't buy it. Keirran is willing to burn the world to save Annwyl, but they are barely together and he never checks in on her, so it's hard to actually believe their love. Ethan loves Kenzie, but there is not a lick of chemistry between them that would make me believe that they are not best friends. They are not in love, in my opinion and it's difficult for me to understand why the author is trying so hard to make it a love match.

One last complaint about Kenzie. I think she is one of the most horrible characters I have ever read. Not only is she useless, she is selfish and a fool. She's a fool, because she is always giving her opinions and advising Ethan when she has no idea what she is talking about. She doesn't have the experience to back up anything she says. Like, at all. She uses the fact that Ethan has been so isolated and lonely to her advantage. She'll be like "this is what a good friend does" and because he thinks he loves her and has no experience with it, he believes her. She is partially to blame for the explosive cliffhanger of an ending.

And the cliffhanger is explosive. It's also infuriating and confusing, because I do not know where the rest of the series is going. Or how it will make sense.

If you love the Iron Fey series you will enjoy this book and be heart sick at the end.

7 of 8 people found the following review helpful.
Sixth entry into "The Iron Fey" series suffers from repetition
By Suzi Hough
**This review contains spoilers for previous books in the series.**

After his second encounter with the fairies, Ethan tries once more to block them out, but when one of his companions from a previous trip appears in his home, seeking help, he realizes that he can no longer turn his back on events in the Nevernever - especially when he learns that his nephew Kierran has gone missing. When Ethan and his girlfriend Kenzie catch up with Kierran at the New Orleans goblin market, they find him playing a most dangerous game. Kierran is desperate to save the love of his life, the exiled Summer fairy Annwyl who is fading slowly into nothingness, and he will make any bargain that will guarantee her life. Ethan must once again journey into the Nevernever in order to protect his impetuous nephew from himself. A prophecy has long existed that Kierran will be the cause of Ethan's death. Can Ethan trust Kierran or is he walking straight into a betrayal?

This is what happens in "The Iron Traitor": Someone (usually Ethan or Kierran) tells the rest of the group that they must Go It Alone. Someone else (nearly always the significant other) wants to know why. Person #1 explains it is to Protect You; Significant Other wails that It's My Choice and I Choose You! Everyone kisses and makes up, only to have the same conversation an hour later.

Seriously, I lost track of how many times Ethan told Kenzie, "I can't take you with me. It's too dangerous!" only to have her respond, "You're just like everyone else, treating me like I'm sick!" Well, yes, Kenzie. You have cancer. YOU ARE SICK. The major reason she seems to like Ethan is because he always eventually caves to her badgering that he treat her "like a normal girl" and pretend he doesn't notice that she isn't physically strong enough to adventure in the Nevernever.

But you want to talk about people throwing themselves in danger for love, you've got to look at Kierran, who WILL NOT LET ANNWYL DIE even after she's come to peace with her fate. Personally, I think it's inadvisable to destroy your soul in order to let another live, but if self-destruction doesn't bother Kierran I suppose it's his choice. But when you are willing to set the fairie courts at war and potentially destroy the balance of the fairy universe for the sake of one person who doesn't really want it- well, that's just selfish. Kierran's a terrible person.

It does make that darn prophecy seem all the more probable, though. Speaking of the prophecy, Ethan finally learns about it in this book, and it's fascinating how it affects his character. All his life, he's thought that Meghan didn't want to see her old family because she didn't love them, but now he's convinced that she was trying to protect them from her son, Kierran - all because of the prophecy she heard when she was younger. His frustration and anger toward his sister redirect to his nephew. But in spite of this, Ethan tries to help Kierran on his quest anyway. As we see more and more of the ugly side of Kierran's personality, Ethan's suppressed goodness rises to the surface. By the end of the book, I found myself liking Ethan and strongly disliking Kierran - which is more or less the opposite of how I felt at the end of The Lost Prince (The Iron Fey).

(Side note: Since "The Iron Traitor" returned to the naming convention used for the rest of the books of the series, I'm left wondering this: Why wasn't the previous book called "The Iron Prince"?)

This would be a lousy place to start reading this series, but if you've been reading the The Iron Fey Boxed Set books than this is an important addition to the story, because we're finally seeing where that prophecy was leading when it was pronounced back in the "Iron's Prophecy" novella.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
The Iron Traitor Review
By Emily @ Falling for YA
One of my biggest pet peeves is when authors spend too much time explaining to you what happened in the last book. This bothered me when I read The Fiery Heart by Richelle Mead, almost ruining the book for me. And this re-capping is bothering me again with The Iron Traitor. So much time was spent reminding me what happened in The Lost Prince that I kept wondering when the action was finally going to begin in The Iron Traitor. Then when things finally started to take a turn in the right direction Kagawa leaves us on a terrible cliffhanger.

I don’t think I would have been bother by all of the reminders if I had better connected with the characters. The second book should make me love the characters even more then the first book did. In the The Lost Prince I was introduced to Ethan, Keirran, Annwyl, and Kenzie. This book should have made me love them. Instead, I found myself getting annoyed with Kenzie constantly butting in; Annwyl playing the fragile flower, and Keirran blindly charging in to situations before thinking. The only person who didn’t get on my nerves was Ethan.

One of the things I loved the most about The Lost Prince was that some of our favorite characters played a role in the story. In this installment Ash, Meagan, Puck, and Grimm do make brief appearances, but they are very brief.

Honestly, in a lot of ways The Iron Traitor was just a space filler to get us to book three. Nothing new really happened in the plot. I think we are meant to have fallen for Annwyl and cared about the relationship between Annwyl and Keirran. Unfortunately, I never found their romance believable. I didn’t understand why these two characters wanted to be together so badly, or why Keirran loved Annwyl so much. She has never really given Keirran a reason to care. I actually wished they would have just let her fade.

Okay, okay, that came out a bit harsh. But honestly, I don’t really care for her as a character. I do hope she grows some kind of a backbone in book 3 though. I also hope we finally get to the mystery of the Lost Fey and their queen.

Despite not really enjoying this installment I will probably continue the series. I am a sucker for The Iron Fey. It was my guilty pleasure and this spin-off series has the general iron fey structure. Although, without the same heart and soul. Hopefully Kagawa can make me love these characters in the next book. I know if a writer can do it, she is more then up to the challenge.

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