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- The Chronicles of Faerie: The Summer King
The Chronicles of Faerie: The Summer King
User reviews
1 review
Overall rating
4.0
Plot
4.0(1)
Characters
N/A(0)
Writing Style
N/A(0)
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
N/A(0)
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Cute book
(Updated: June 20, 2026)
Overall rating
4.0
Plot
4.0
Characters
N/A
Writing Style
N/A
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
N/A
Reader reviewed by Ria
On the anniversary of her twin sister, Honors death, Laurel travels back to Ireland to finish something her sister never accomplished. After having strange dreams, Laurel is compelled to learn about the faerie world, though she does not believe in faeries. But when a strange, roly-poly man appears to her appealing for help to finish the mission Honor started, Laurel thinks its her duty to finish it and rescue Honor.
What Laurel doesnt know is that the journey is filled with danger, mystery, and excitement. She gets help from Ian, a boy shes known since she was young. Together, Laurel and Ian face terrifying attacks from otherworldly creatures, including water faeries and raven-people. She is given guidance from the wise golden eagle and she manages to ally herself with one of the most powerful woman pirates, Grace OMalley. Laurels goal is to return the Summer King back to the faeries so that he in turn will light the Ring of Fire. If she fails her mission, everything will be lost, both in the faerie world and the human world.
When I first started the book, I had to force myself to get through the first half of the book. I wasnt getting interested in the story. But the story turned when the action began. O.R. Mellings descriptions of Ireland really helped the story. I was interested in the faerie world, so I wanted to see how she depicted them. I also liked the history that she threw in, with Grace OMalley. There were some twists thrown into the plot, which really livened up the story. I did not see the ending coming and I was really surprised. Im glad that I finished reading the novel. I would recommend this to lovers of fantasy. As this is part of a quartet, I will look for the remaining stories and hopefully they will be entertaining as well.
On the anniversary of her twin sister, Honors death, Laurel travels back to Ireland to finish something her sister never accomplished. After having strange dreams, Laurel is compelled to learn about the faerie world, though she does not believe in faeries. But when a strange, roly-poly man appears to her appealing for help to finish the mission Honor started, Laurel thinks its her duty to finish it and rescue Honor.
What Laurel doesnt know is that the journey is filled with danger, mystery, and excitement. She gets help from Ian, a boy shes known since she was young. Together, Laurel and Ian face terrifying attacks from otherworldly creatures, including water faeries and raven-people. She is given guidance from the wise golden eagle and she manages to ally herself with one of the most powerful woman pirates, Grace OMalley. Laurels goal is to return the Summer King back to the faeries so that he in turn will light the Ring of Fire. If she fails her mission, everything will be lost, both in the faerie world and the human world.
When I first started the book, I had to force myself to get through the first half of the book. I wasnt getting interested in the story. But the story turned when the action began. O.R. Mellings descriptions of Ireland really helped the story. I was interested in the faerie world, so I wanted to see how she depicted them. I also liked the history that she threw in, with Grace OMalley. There were some twists thrown into the plot, which really livened up the story. I did not see the ending coming and I was really surprised. Im glad that I finished reading the novel. I would recommend this to lovers of fantasy. As this is part of a quartet, I will look for the remaining stories and hopefully they will be entertaining as well.
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