REVIEW:
 

 
Winter by Marissa Meyer
fourth and final book in the Lunar Chronicles series (link to book one)
(probably my favorite cover of the series as a whole)
 
For those of you who are unaware, I'm majorly into the Lunar Chronicles. It's a series of loose sci-fi/fantasy blended retellings of Cinderella, Little Red Riding Hood, Rapunzel, and Snow White (characters in order of the book that introduces them). Out of the whole series, I think my favorite is book three, Cress. It's when we finally meet the Rapunzel character and she's an awesomely talented computer hacker.
 
Anyway, in this last book we meet Princess Winter, the Snow White character and step-daughter of the Big Bad, Moon Queen Levana. She was my least favorite out of the main cast, not because she was unlikeable, but because she didn't have as much characterization. We spent so long getting to know the other three girls and their love interests, watching their friendships grow, that Winter just felt sort of tacked-on. She was the most passive, and had the least impact on the plot of the series itself. Her love interest, Jacin, we've seen since book one, even if mostly in the background, and he was an active character in at least half of the third book. So I was a bit disappointed that I didn't connect with Winter as quickly or as easily as all the others. However, that was really my only main complaint.
 
Most of the book took place on the moon, which I don't think any of the previous books did for more than maybe a scene here and there. So that was fun--getting to see the outrageous and outlandish fashions of the Lunar aristocracy, the decadance of the palace and capital city, and the oppressive, tyrannical regime that Queen Levana imposes on her poorer citizens. We got to see that the Lunars wouldn't support the main characters' revolution just because of royal inheritance rules, but because Levana is really, horrifically terrible. In addition to that, the cast spent most of the book having to split up into groups and pairs that didn't necessarily interact much previously, and seeing those situations did a lot for character growth. And I spent a good portion of the book being legitimately worried for these guys, because I knew that while Marissa Meyer's not the type of writer to kill off main characters, she's not afraid of seriously/permanantly injuring them. And that happened--quite a lot, in fact. Hence my feeling anxious so often.
 
Overall, this was a very satisfying conclusion to the series. I'm really excited for the short story collection to come out this February, and especially the story featuring Jacin and Winter that's exclusive to the printed collection. I plan on scheduling a reread of the whole series sometime next year, so I can read them all in a row and find the things I forgot or didn't pick up on the first time around.
 
(also apparently there's a Target-exclusive edition that uses a collage of fanart as the end pages! I kinda want to hop onto the website and buy it, but I really shouldn't because I need to save last month's surplus income for December's rent 
)