A Court of Wings and Ruin Chapter 8: Feyre Reminds Us She Has Plans

A Court of Wings and Ruin Chapter 8:

Tamlin paced in front of the hearth in his study, every turn as sharp as a blade.

Right away, I thought Tamlin must be practicing for Faelander. 

He’s furious with Feyre and Lucien for their revenge on the Maybe-Incest-Twins. Weirdly, this whole chapter is basically Feyre recapping her secret plans that she executed off-screen. Super exposition heavy.

So it turns out that she and Lucien lured the Bogge to their camp and unleashed it on the twins. Furious, Tamlin screams at both of them to get out of his study. Feyre goads him into having another abusive meltdown.

“They hunted down and butchered those humans for sport,” I went on. “You might be willing to get on your knees for Hybern, but I certainly am not.”

He exploded.

Tamlin unleashes…GAY PANIC RAGEEEEEEEE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Feyre lets herself get injured and prevents her healing powers from kicking in so she can gain the sympathy of Tamlin’s guards and Lucien while also making Tamlin feel awful.

“I’m fine,” I told him again.

No one, not even Tamlin, looked convinced.

And if I could have painted that moment, I would have named it A Portrait in Snares and Baiting.

If I could paint this moment, I would name it A Portrait in WE FUCKING GET IT, FEYRE.

Rhys checks in.

I know better than to tell you to be careful, or to come home. But I want you home. Soon. And I want him dead for putting a hand on you.

Even with the entirety of the land between us, his rage rippled down the bond.

This passage was highlighted nearly 400 times. I’m assuming because this anger is sexy and romantic.

They flirt and send like emojis down their bond. No seriously.

I sent back an image of me sticking out my tongue at him.

Feyre informs us she’s got more evil-but-good plans in the works. She sucks up to Ianthe and praises her and Tamlin for being great leaders and protecting their land, but somehow this is “a dare”, and that night a group of naga attack.

The naga had a key that had gone missing. After the attack is thwarted–and remember, this all happened in the past and is purely exposition–Tamlin has to punish the sentry who had his key stolen. Ianthe declares that he should receive twenty one lashes.

I made my move. Slid my power into the bound sentry’s mind and freed the memory I’d coiled up tightly in his head— freed his tongue, too.

“It was her,” he panted, jerking his chin to Ianthe. “She took the keys.”

I’m so confused. Who made the sentry lose this memory initially? Ianthe? Feyre?

I’d been waiting to see how she’d counter my showing of power at the solstice, tracking her movements that entire day and night. Within moments of my leaving the party she’d gone to the barracks, used some glimmer of power to lull him to sleep, and taken his keys. Then planted her warnings about the naga’s impending attacks … after she gave the creatures the keys to the gates.

From a storytelling perspective, this is just…so anticlimactic. I guess it would be hard to feel tension through reading our recaps, but for any of you who read the books, were you feeling anything at all during these parts of the story? I’m bored to tears.

Feyre tries to get everyone to listen to the sentry, but Tamlin lets himself be bullied into punishing him. This turns the sentries (and Lucien) against Tamlin. I bet if Feyre could pain this moment she would call it A Portrait of Making Everyone See Tamlin is a Douche.

The chapter ends with Feyre cuddling up to Lucien in mock-fear and the lashes beginning.

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8 comments

  1. Rebecca Bauer Reply

    You’re right, there really wasn’t any tension. Feyre’s conviction of her own cleverness got old really quickly. I saw glimpses of this in the last book, too, where some sections were written with this air like it was the coolest thing that had ever happened when it was just like…normal action that a reader could expect out of a novel. And after slogging through so many useless scenes where nothing happened, the last thing I want is to be subconsciously beat over the head with how cool it is that something is finally happening. I never was, really, but I’m still not buying any of this. I miss Tamlin boring stories from book one!

  2. Krista B Reply

    The weird jealousy thing with Lucien was always pretty disgusting. As bad as this part is, it only gets worse once she goes to the Night Court (in my opinion).

  3. Lya Reply

    Rhys: I know better 👀 than to tell you to be careful, 😎 or to come home. 😣 But I want you home. Soon. 😉 And I want him dead 💀 for putting a hand 👋 on you.😠

    Feyre: 😝

  4. Pip Reply

    There’s so much almost cool writing here – I personally kinda liked the line ‘and if I could have painted this moment’ line, but it’s all overshadowed by the rest of the awful writing and how much I despise these fey morons ugh

    • Gabriella Reply

      I agree. Also that “title” is abysmal, “A Portrait in Snares and Baiting.” What the fuck?

  5. Cara Reply

    “I sent back an image of me sticking out my tongue at him.”
    I hate this. So much. It’s such lazy writing to basically just say she sent an emoji, but a telepathic emoji. Why would you even need images to convey tone or emotion when you’re communicating via deep metaphysical soul-bond? And the phrasing sounds like My Immortal.

  6. Nedelina Tagareva Reply

    I was more confused by these flashbacks in this chapter than anything. Like what part was exactly Feyre’s plan and what was Ianthe just reacting to Feyre’s insults (or whatever)? If we’ve actually seen all of the things happening in the flashbacks unfold normally, maybe it would have been interesting, but maybe not. This first part of the book was too boring for me to care… I’m struggling with the second part now, but I keep falling asleep. And I don’t usually fall asleep reading…

  7. Gabriella Reply

    Does anyone actually understand that sun celebration thing? I have no idea what happened with that

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