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City of Fallen Angels By Cassandra Clare: digital book analysis


Summary (from the book jacket)
Clary is back in New York and life is good: she’s in education to be a shadowhunter and is finally able to call Jace her boyfriend. But nothing comes without a amount. When Jace inexplicably begins to pull away from her, Clary is forced to acknowledge that she herself has set in motion a chain if occurrences that could lead to the loss of everything she appreciates. Even Jace.
Love. Blood. Betrayal. Revenge. The stakes are better than ever…
The Review
City of Fallen Angels is the fourth novel in the prominent Mortal Instruments young adult urban fantasy series by Cassandra Clare. This is a fairly complex fantasy series so it’s really mandatory to have read the previous books in the series past starting this one.
The Mortal Instruments books adhere to the adventures of Clary a teenaged girl from New York who discovers that a supernatural world is accessible and she is a part of it. Along the way it is uncovered that her mother is a shadowhunter, her to-be step-father a werewolf and her best best friend Simon (a nice normal Jewish boy) gets turned into a vampire. Clary met Jace and fell easily in love with him, only he turned out to be her long-lost brother – and then he wasn’t – so it all turned out okay in the end! It’s safe to say there has been no absence of excitement or drama in the series so far.
The storyline in City of Fallen Angels take place a few years after the events in book three, City of Glass. City of Glass had a grand finale. All secrets were finally revealed. The bad guys were slain. The world was salvaged. That book felt like the end of the series and I liked it. There were some inquiries left about Simon, such as how would he cope with being a vampire in the long term but for the most part everything was fairly well wrapped up.
So what ground is left to include City of Fallen Angels? Well, sadly, not new. Instead of focusing on a new plot line and maybe a new romance for secondary characters, the author drags out more of the same tired issues that readers saw decided in City of Glass. Clary and Jace are together but the happy couple aren’t happy. Jace is withdrawn and Clary is anguished. Oh no, they can’t be together even though they love each other soooooo much. In the previous books this plotline worked because Clary and Jace’s forbidden love (they opinion they were brother and sister) gave a huge amount of soap-opera style drama to the story. In City of Fallen Angels it feels like the author decided that Clary and Jace’s relationship angst worked so well for the first many books that it would serve as the plotline for this book too – but unfortunately she forgot to supply a real, solid, need for them not to be happy. She also lazily recycled the already vanquished (dead) villain – why couldn’t we have a new bad partner?
To me the problem with City of Fallen Angles was that the Mortal Instruments series was originally planned to be a trilogy – a story of three parts – but like all popular fantasy books that sell well the author was soon contracted for further instalments. I love the Mortal Instruments universe, its characters and its stories – so this should be a cause for celebration but (as with a lot of the fantasy series that I have enjoyed over the years… Laurell K. Hamilton, Christine Feehan etc.) I’m fast coming to the conclusion that you can have too much of a good thing. If an author has nothing new to add to the journey then maybe they should decline the offer to write more.
City of Fallen Angels is one of the most tedious books I’ve read in a long while. No real drama. Tired recycled plotlines and villains. Frankly this book is just dull – disappointingly so when you consider how much better the author can usually write. At times I could have easily given up on accomplishing City of Fallen Angels altogether but I stuck with it for Simon. Somehow I’m sure that there is a fascinating story in here some time about a sweet and nerdy vegetarian Jewish boy who got unexpectedly turned into a vampire, then cursed with the freaky power to literally bring the wrath of God down upon those who would harm him. To my way of planning this would make a much pleasing story than “Clary and Jace love each other but can’t be together, part 2.”
In summing-up, City of Fallen Angels is for completists only… who will probably read it with masturbates crossed that this series gets better next installment.

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