![]() ![]() ![]() The Fates Divide is much more deliberate and slow-moving. The political intrigue, as well as the constant threat of pain and suffering, set a pretty quick pace in Carve the Mark. It’s a really fascinating, yet subtle, switch.Īnother way The Fates Divide is different from its predecessor is the pacing and urgency of the story itself. The world-building in Carve the Mark was done through the characters of Cyra, Akos, and company, but the world-building in The Fates Divide is what complicates and develops the characters’ interpersonal relationships. It focuses less on the larger world and more on how the characters perceive it. ![]() While the first novel was very much a world-building novel that focused on just one or two specific locations, The Fates Divide is somehow more of an introspective character piece that spans across different planets. ![]() That being said, though they’re two novels in the same series that tell a continuous story, The Fates Divide is very different from Carve the Mark. The Fates Divide has everything fans loved about Carve the Mark: Our favorite characters, space travel, dangerous yet alluring locations, interplanetary tensions… All the good stuff. Related: ‘Carve the Mark’ book review: An engaging sci-fi tale in a(nother) galaxy far, far away ‘The Fates Divide’ book review ![]()
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