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72 of 74 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars More like Magic Study than Poison Study
First of all, I have to warn any readers that if you've never read any of Snyder's previous novels you will most likely end up becoming extremely confused -mainly because Snyder throws so many characters at the reader that it would become quite overwhelming if you didn't already know who some of them were from the other books. So, view Storm Glass as a stand-alone novel...
Published on April 30, 2009 by watch4birds

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21 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Flawed
I love this author and her 'Study' trilogy was excellent. However, this newest book seemed more thrown together and has some definite flaws. Opal's unique type of magic seems to just adjust to whatever works for the author to push the story and doesn't seem based in any kind of logic. It just seems to change on a whim, being one thing in one situation and another thing in...
Published on June 9, 2009 by D. Hoskins


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72 of 74 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars More like Magic Study than Poison Study, April 30, 2009
By 
watch4birds (Pittsburgh, PA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Storm Glass (Glass, Book 1) (Paperback)
First of all, I have to warn any readers that if you've never read any of Snyder's previous novels you will most likely end up becoming extremely confused -mainly because Snyder throws so many characters at the reader that it would become quite overwhelming if you didn't already know who some of them were from the other books. So, view Storm Glass as a stand-alone novel at your own peril. That said, I did enjoy this novel. However, I found it to be more reminiscent of Magic Study or Fire Study than Poison Study.

Opal, the glass maker who has the strange ability to insert her magic into her creations, is asked to travel to the Stormdance clan in order to figure out why the glass orbs that contain a storm's power are breaking. There she meets Kade, a Stormdancer. She's there long enough to learn that a rebel group from another clan is plotting to steal the recipe that is used to make the glass orbs. Opal travels back and forth over several different clans (basically she's in a saddle about 15 of 20 days). Opal stays in the Stormdance clan and in Kade's company for only a very short amount of time before returning back to the Citadel, the magic school. There, she meets up with Ulrick, whose company she keeps for about 75% of the novel. A multitude of sub-plots are added as Opal and her friends try to solve the mystery surrounding the glass orbs and other such things before riding out to another clan to solve some problem and eventually Ixia.

Like Magic Study and Fire Study, the reader is pelted with one "adventure" after the other. Opal travels to about 7 of the clans in magical Sitia and about 3 of the Military Districts in Ixia. That's a lot of traveling -and, of course, not one journey was without being attacked, imprisoned or some other type of dilemma. The non-stop action read just like the last two books of the Study series, giving the reader no time to catch a breath.

Because of this, I feel like character development extremely suffers. You learn a lot about Opal, what drives her, what her fears are, etc. And really, she's the only one you really get to know. Kade pops into the picture sporadically and only for a few pages at a time. He's probably only in about 15% of the book. It's hard for me to view him as a serious romantic contender when he's hardly even part of the novel.

A few good things are that Opal is not a mirror image of Yelena. Opal seems to be unsure of who she really is and unwilling to see what value she has in the magical community. She struggles against herself to find her inner strength without relying on anyone else to protect or solve her problems.

To recap, I would only recommend this novel to those that have read the Study books by Snyder. And, to those (like me) who wished to read another book with the magic of Poison Study, this book is not it. It's good. It's fun to read. The main character is interesting. But it just doesn't have the same sparkling quality as Poison Study. There are too many sub-plots and way, way too many characters that keep the novel from flowing seamlessly.
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27 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A few cracks in the glass, April 28, 2009
This review is from: Storm Glass (Glass, Book 1) (Paperback)
I like Maria Snyder's books (this is her 4th) but she tends to repeat herself. The first three books followed the trials of Yelana Zaltana, a Soulfinder who seemed to attract every sadist within a 100 mile radius of wherever she was standing.

Unfortuately "Storm Glass" continues with many of the same themes. Opal Cowan works her magic through glass not souls, but she is an engaging character with an interesting talent. Unfortuately she has the same sort of luck Yelana has with kidnappers, rapists, torturers and betrayers. Some of these plot devices struck me as a bit much for a Young Adult series.

On one hand, Snyder wants the reader to believe that the central female character is unigue, special and powerful enough to be assigned guards from Sitia's elite magicians. But she also expects us to accept that a lone rogue magician can get past those defenses, bind the heroine in chains and spend weeks torturing her.

I like these books, they're a really good read, but I'm disappointed by so much violence repeatedly directed towards the female characters.

Poor Opal, traumatized in the Magic Study and Fire Study books, shows up here for another round of abuse. After three years of struggling to come to terms with the murder of her sister and her first experience as a kidnapping victim, she is just starting to open up enough to trust her classmates when another blood magician shows up in the body of a fellow glassmaker. Seduction, betrayal and many torture scenes follow.

I recommend "Storm Glass" to older readers of the Young Adult genre, but encourage them to be warned. These books go to some very nasty places.
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21 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Flawed, June 9, 2009
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I love this author and her 'Study' trilogy was excellent. However, this newest book seemed more thrown together and has some definite flaws. Opal's unique type of magic seems to just adjust to whatever works for the author to push the story and doesn't seem based in any kind of logic. It just seems to change on a whim, being one thing in one situation and another thing in a different situation.

There is a lot of glass making tech stuff, a result of careful and active research on the author's part. Appreciated the authentic touch, but perhaps too much of a good thing. More plot & character development and less talk of making glass again and again. I realize that Opal makes glass, that is her thing, but I don't need to go thru it step by step each time. Once was enough to grasp the process enough for the story to make sense.

As to making sense...Opal's love life?? SPOILER: At the end when she realizes she loves Kade and he loves her, why does she then state that she must give Ulrick a chance and explore their feelings??? What? She needs to let Ulrick go so that he can find someone who truly loves him. This made no sense to me and sort of made me wonder if she really loves Kade or is stillllll confused.

Pazia: were we supposed to get to know her and realize that under her mean witchy exterior there lies yet another mean hateful witch? Exactly why does Opal feel responsible for 4 yrs of being treated badly by Pazia and her cohorts? I'm sure if even one person had joined her at lunch, approached in a friendly manner, or treated her with common decency Opal would have responded in kind. Instead we are supposed to believe Opal was putting off some kind of vibe that made others treat her badly??? This also made no sense.

And was I the only one who thought that people seemed entirely too cavalier with Opal's safety. Sometimes she was guarded, but many many times she was just left on her own. A girl of uncertain magic, little self defense training and previously victimized and tortured and yet they send her on missions and allow her to stand guard alone again and again. How can she guard when she has magic only to make glass animals and very few fighting skills? Not to mention her skills and knowlege put her at grave risk. Hellooo???

And lastly, the whole glass animal communicators. Pet peeve, no pun intended, but why animals? It just seems really silly to have some powerful Magician speaking into a glass turtle or bunny??? Why not a sphere or oval or just some sort of easily packable shape?

I will read the next book, Sea Glass, and I'm looking forward to it. I just hope it is a little better crafted than this one.

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars A bit disappointing., July 29, 2009
By 
Matthew A. Richardson (Ypsilanti, MI United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Storm Glass (Glass, Book 1) (Paperback)
I like the previous three books in the series, but this one just didn't break new ground. The main character is another Yelena, minus poison, plus glassmaking. I loved the focus on glassmaking; it was a neat addition to the book and made it more engrossing for me. Didn't like yet another female character being sexually and physically abused. Can we have female protagonists in fantasy who don't get raped and tortured?
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Completely uninteresting, June 17, 2009
This review is from: Storm Glass (Glass, Book 1) (Paperback)
I admit I have not read this entire book. I got to about chapter 4 and stopped, I was just not interested in knowing anymore about Opal. I read Poison Study and Magic Study and enjoyed them both, but there just seems to be no reason to like Opal. She is simply a victim(of others and her own mind constantly seeing herself at fault for everything) with the power to put magic in glass. In the first pages she is filled with self doubt....repeatedly. It is almost tedious at that point. There is little reason plotted behind her situation, she is simply thrust into extraordinary circumstance, being admitted to the keep despite being only a one-trick magician and then sent on a very important mission just because it has to do with glass.
I just couldn't imagine finishing this book.
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13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars A hasty and thrown together book..., June 16, 2009
This review is from: Storm Glass (Glass, Book 1) (Paperback)
After loving Poison Study, thinking Magic Study was alright and then downright skipping pages in Fire Study, I did have hopes for this new trilogy. Alas, I was disapointed....

Very choppy, with terrible descriptions of the characters and action that would lurch foward with no rhyme or reason.

The main character, Opal Cowen, had interesting magic but a major victim's complex. She truly believed by the end that she was at fault for other people's antaganism towards her!

Probably won't read any of the rest of series, unless compelled by severe boredom.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Very shallow, little development, and barely any description., February 21, 2010
This review is from: Storm Glass (Glass, Book 1) (Paperback)
I really wanted to like this book, but the plot was all over the place. Character names like Sir, Tricky, Blue Eyes, and Crafty screamed "bad writing" to me. Give your characters real names and SHOW us who they are with their actions. Often times the book felt like continuous dialog with characters I couldn't understand or feel connected to. Lack of description or scene setting made me feel like I was just living inside Opal's head. Granted it's written in first person, I would have enjoyed more description or background. If you haven't read the Study series first, you will likely be lost in this book.

The driving force of the plot was equally confusing. Even at the end of the book, I still felt like I didn't really know why any of the events took place. SPOILER - People are jealous of the Stormdancer's ability to harness the power of the storms into glass orbs of workable energy. So Opal's being hunted because she knows the right sand mix to make glass orbs. She also knows where the imprisoned Warper's glass prisons are [from last book]. Who cares about diamonds? Opal is encouraged to experiment with her powers. However, she will likely be jailed and punished because she may be too dangerous. Yet if she wasn't encouraged, none of this would likely have happened. Yet she's still to blame for being dangerous. Opal also randomly falls in love with the stormdancer, yet she sleeps with someone else.

I just had a hard time believing most of these characters. Even in the Study series, it seemed like Yelena and Valek could do no true wrong. Some how they always got out of everything at the last minute. Opal seems to have similar encounters. The Study series was fun - though Fire Study was all over the place. The Glass series lacks a coherent plot, scene setting, and character development.

I gave it two stars because I did finish it. I wanted to know more about the world and about Opal's magic. But I finished the book disappointed and confused.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Slow Moving at Times & not a Stand Alone Book, June 18, 2009
This review is from: Storm Glass (Glass, Book 1) (Paperback)
I enjoyed the previous books in this world quite a bit and was eager to learn more about it and follow a character introduced earlier. However, if I had not read the books from the first trilogy, I would have been completely lost. That should not have been a problem at the start of a new trilogy.

Also, I found myself bored about halfway through it. I could barely get through it, though I was happy to have made the effort. I like the main characters and would like to see this trilogy continue.

Since I can't recommend this new series without the reader having read the earlier trilogy, I can't really recommend it. A book needs to stand alone. Especially a book that begins a new trilogy - and isn't say for instance the second book in a trilogy.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Storm Glass, July 14, 2009
Storm Glass would best be described a series of unfortunate events. Opal, like many of the characters in Snyder's series, has to deal with all kinds of trouble. She can only do one type of magic, her classmates don't like her, and a few people are out to kidnap and torture her. She's not sure of herself at all, and always refuses to see that she is strong and special. The romance in this book isn't as interesting it was in the other books, but it was present. My main complaint with this book is that the plot is mostly completing tasks. Go here, face danger, come back, go there, get kidnapped, go home, etc. There is an overall fake diamond plot, but I didn't really feel connected to it. I was more interested in Opal exploring her abilities and making glass than any of the many tasks she was assigned to. The book also drags a bit about a fourth of the way in, but it does resume for a good ending. Overall the book is decent, it resembles the others in the series, so if you enjoyed those give this one a try.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Another Miss -Spoilers-, September 20, 2009
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This review is from: Storm Glass (Glass, Book 1) (Paperback)
After reading the unfortunate decline from Poison Study to Fire Study in Snyder's first trilogy, I was finished reading anything by this author. My husband however purchased this for me because he saw I had the other three and I am a small medium glass blower. So I love the husband but the book not so much. In all fairness, I only got to around page 150 before I cut my loses and I couldn't force myself to finish this book. Unfortunately, it follows the same problems as Fire Study. Basically, let's go on long boring trips and give our brain a rest. It can just take up space in my head instead of realizing this could be a trap of some kind, silly me. Meanwhile, I will mope about how perpetually "uncool" I am because my magic is not the cat's meow (oh, wait maybe it is) and "ooops, did I do that" kind of adventures. If I hadn't read the trilogy prior to this I would say I would be totally lost so a consideration if you purchase.
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Storm Glass (Glass, Book 1)
Storm Glass (Glass, Book 1) by Maria V. Snyder (Paperback - April 28, 2009)
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