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I don’t want to live through not having them. You want me to hate myself, if I end up going first? You can live through losing people, Rupe. “One day one of us is going to miss the other. Jade Lomax Martial arts AU: Leaf drags Jack along to a tiny martial arts club known as the Academy. “Take it up with whoever invented mortality,” said Jack. Lessons in Falling Series: Leagues and Legends, by E. I don’t want to live through not having them.” “Take it up with whoever invented mortality,” said Jack.
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Jack pulled his hands from his pockets, letting them hang loose and open. You would always be gone and we would always miss you.” We’d be okay, we’d be happy even, make new friends and new homes and new ambitions–but you would always matter. “If you had really been gone, Rupe, we would never have gotten over it. Rupert was watching Jack’s shoulder, his shirtfront, his worn belt. I’m going to miss him forever, no matter how used I get to the loss, and I wouldn’t trade that friendship and that love for any peace of mind.” I’m not waiting for him, but I’m not letting him go either. I lost him, he’s gone, he’s never coming back. Goodgrammaritan: On grief, loss, and the value of friendship ‘Obituaries: I’ is Ch 5, so you don’t even need to go particularly far in to start to see but I thiiiink my favorite Obituary might be in the third book, although let’s be real they’re all very good every single person who dies is very different and very human and will break your heart they are so well done. read them yourself and find out! the author decided to self-publish and release the ebooks for free, they are very good. Oh, you mean the ifmlam interludes being based on Obituaries? Props to them for the extra effort, unless it’s the main story premise, in which case props to them for the premise and the work on it.
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I know people are incredibly varied, but I don’t think I could pull off writing many death aftermaths without the people and their stories being incredibly formulaic. My perception of battles is that lots of people die. Seriously, I cannot emphasize enough how much I love this series.I also saw the comment about your friend who writes about the aftermath of character death! I wonder how they manage that.
E jade lomax free#
Oh yeah, and you can find all three as free ebooks here. I’m almost done with the third, Remember the Dust. I read Beanstalk and its sequel Echoes of a Giantkiller in one day, that’s how invested I became. I just fell in love with it halfway through and wanted more people to read it. There’s no one asking me to recommend this book. There’s a very neat explanation for how magic works that I like a lot. There’s some romance, but that’s not the focus of the stories. At least half the main and supporting cast comprises of people of color, and there’s multiple LGB+ couples and trans characters. There are some very clever twists that I didn’t see coming. There’s a fascinatingly complex woman antagonist. Characters actually deal with the emotional and mental health repercussions of doing the whole childhood hero thing. There are interesting twists and subversions of classic fantasy tropes.
E jade lomax series#
This series has, like… everything I love. Eager to learn, to excel, to escape, she has far from given up. Rupert Willington Jons Hammerfeld the Seventh would just like everything to be orderly, thank you very much, but it seems the only way to make monsters and myths (and malicious but mundane men) to stop rampaging through his world is to go out and do some hero-ing himself. They are put together as an unwilling study group, but they become something more. He wants to know everything and majoring in sagework at the Academy is the best way to do that. Laney Jones left her home to avoid the constraints there, only to find different barriers holding her back at the Academy. Grey doesn’t want to save anyone but himself. Jack Farris doesn’t want to save the world, just every person he knows, encounters, or hears of. It’s a bit of an issue. S. While those genres have their fans, they’re not really my cup of tea, which is why I was so happy when I stumbled into Beanstalk and its sequels.
E jade lomax full#
It seems like every fantasy novel aimed at someone above the age of fifteen either is a trite romance with a fantasy backdrop or full George RR Martin levels of dark and fucked up. Okay, so I absolutely love fantasy, but I’ve become kind of picky about it lately.