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Ninth House (Alex Stern, 1)

Ninth House (Alex Stern, 1)

byLeigh Bardugo
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Top positive review

All positive reviews›
Blissfullybookish
4.0 out of 5 starsDark and Gritty - An exceptionally dark read!
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on November 26, 2019
It is no secret that I gravitate toward dark aesthetic. While it may not be what my brand exudes, it is a personal favorite of mine. Dark and moody aesthetics influence everything from my makeup choices, to my wardrobe, and even my Lightroom presets. Needless to say, I was immensely excited about Ninth House the minute I heard Leigh talk about it.

Overall, this book did not let me down. It is widely different from the Shadow and Bone trilogy as well as the Six of Crows duology. It is adult, gritty, and somewhat depressing, but most of all it is real. While there are obviously paranormal and magical elements โ€“ it is set in the real world, our world. It deals with real issues that are affecting people today including drug addiction, abusive relationships, mental illness, and rape and is not for the faint of heart.

The Plot
We meet Alex (or Galaxy) Stern as she struggles her way through her first year at Yale. She is not educationally qualified to be attending an Ivy League school, but has gotten wrapped in the seedy underground of the secret societies that take place at Yale. See, Alex has something that makes her unlike anyone else, she can see and interact with ghosts (or Grays as they are known in this world).

Because of her talent, she was recruited by Lethe House, which is the organization that monitors and regulates the paranormal activity of the other eight houses of Yale. The other houses each dabble in different types of magic to further their agenda. In fact, the book opens with Alex attending a ritual that involves members of one of the societies analyzing the insides of a kidnapped hospital patient so they can predict the future of the NY Stock Exchange and NASDAQ markets. This is only one instance of this ritual, which seems to happen routinely for the last several decades and can have different outcomes like improving the ranking of memberโ€™s book on the NY Times Best Sellers list or making a mediocre pop song rise on the chart.

However, something during this particular ritual isโ€ฆ off. We learn that Grays routinely attend these rituals and are drawn to anything that makes them feel more alive like pain, emotions, sex, and the like. They are usually complacent mostly because no one can see them except Alex and as long as someone does not form a connection with them, they are harmless. However, something goes wrong and the Grays get upset and begin beating on their otherworldly barrier. They become completely agitated and Alex is concerned that they will become violent. Thankfully, after a minute, the chaos stops.

Shaken, Alex leaves after the ritual is completed โ€“ but finds that sometime during the night (rituals always happen on Thursdays) that a New Haven resident was murdered. Something about the death does not sit well with Alex and while she cannot prove society involvement, she thinks there is more to meet the eye.

As she investigates the death, we get flashbacks to her bleak previous life, before Lethe, and her induction into the society by her mentor Darlington (who disappeared before the start of the book). Could Darlingtonโ€™s disappearance be tied to the murder of the New Haven resident? Alex intends to find out, all while trying to maintain her job as the resident mediator for the societies and Yale as well as get by as a student and maintain at least passing grades.

The Review

Ninth House was an incredibly engrossing read. While I find myself being fairly good at being able to predict what will happen by the end of the novel, this one I was not successful at. It reads as a mystery and one I was not successful at solving.

I thought Alex was a very different character, since I usually stay away from reading contemporary fiction she came across as much more โ€˜realโ€™ than I am used to reading and I enjoyed the change. However, because it was so real, it is a fairly depressing book. Dealing with so many terrible things that happened in her life leads her to be fairly downtrodden.

I do not consider myself to be easily triggered, and I do not think I was โ€˜triggeredโ€™ from this book as much as I was just depressed during certain parts. This book explicitly describes rape, drug use, physical abuse, and death. It is not a book that should be for the faint of heart and you need to go into reading this with a clear mind and understanding of what this book entails. Some parts are graphic and hard to read, others are entrancing, but none of it is particularly up lifting.

I have seen some reviews complaining that it was boring read โ€“ let me make this clear... This is part one of a long series. Leigh herself has said she hopes to write five or six novels in the Alex Stern series, and honestly this book reads like book one of a long series to me. It sets the groundwork, and the lore that I am sure will be important in the following books. Does that maybe bog some people down, yes, but if you look at it from the perspective of it being one of five or six books it makes sense. Maybe, if you are someone who does not appreciate so much backstory, wait until one or two more come out so you can power read through several at a time.

I do think this book is absolutely worth the read. It is creepy and dark and the perfect October read. We end on a little bit of a cliffhanger and I want to know what happens to these characters as there are SO many questions left unanswered.
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49 people found this helpful

Top critical review

All critical reviews›
Aleshia Huber (Mad Scibrarian)
3.0 out of 5 starsExplore the Dark, Occult Side of an Elite University, But Slowly
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on January 27, 2020
Yaleโ€™s secret societies perform various occult activities in order to predict the future or perform glamours. Their alumni and networks rely on the occult to remain powerful figures in business and politics. Occult activities come at a price, however, and the societies need to be kept in check to make sure that Yale University itself doesnโ€™t get caught and punished. Yale needs good press after all. Thatโ€™s where Alex Stern comes in. Alex is recruited by Lethe, the organization that watches over the secret societies and makes sure they arenโ€™t abusing their privilege. Why was Alex recruited for this task you ask? After all, she isnโ€™t a typical Yale studentโ€“ a high school drop-out, drug abuser, and no connections whatsoever. Iโ€™ll leave it to the book itself to tell you why, itโ€™s quickly mentioned in the first chapter or so.

I love the setting and paranormal worldbuilding of this book. The occult is very ingrained into our present day, which almost gives it the feeling that these things are actually real and possible. (Yes, I know itโ€™s not in the end, but how sad). Itโ€™s a little spooky and very eerie and at times even horrifying. Yaleโ€™s secret societies are dark things that Yale depends on to stay the elite college that it is. All that power must come at a price. But whose price is it? This book is very much a check in privilege. Itโ€™s anger at the very rich who seem to be able to control it all and get away with everything. This anger is expressed through Alex as she is an outsider, or ordinary person, looking in. Alex has had a very hard past that is not through a fault of her own, and has had to fight her way to where she is now. She doesnโ€™t take her viewpoint for granted or choose to suck up to the Yale elite, but instead will speak for the common people.

The book is told from alternating timelines. It goes from present, the early Spring semester of Alexโ€™s freshmen year, to the fall where she first started at Yale and working for Lethe. I really enjoyed this alternate way of telling the story as it added a mysteryโ€“ one of the characters is missing in the present and the past builds up to what caused that. Additionally, since I mainly liked this book for the occult parts, itโ€™s more interesting to be thrown into the present where Alex kind of knows whats going on, and then get an explanation in the past.

Alex is definitely a strong female character and youโ€™ll learn why she is the way she is while reading. She has a tough and dark past, and itโ€™s admirable how she fights through. The overall darkness of the novel truly means this book is for adults and not the traditional YA audience that Ms. Bardugo writes for. There are many reviews with trigger warnings out there already (and I personally am not the best at identifying all of them), so do your research if you think a dark adult novel may be too much for you.

This book has a lot of good qualities to it, so why am I not rating this higher? Itโ€™s just very slow going, and not much happens for a good portion of the book. Some of that is more focusing on Alexโ€™s drive and daily life at Yale, others is just minor worldbuilding for the societies . Theyโ€™re important but not necessarily the most interesting, or at least delivered in a very interesting way. I think itโ€™s also a fault that I read a lot of YA and have read Ms. Bardugoโ€™s own YA novels. YA books are generally very fast and pull you into the story quickly and keep you there. I wasnโ€™t rushing to find out what happens. My expectations may have been too high. I donโ€™t hate slow burn books, mind you, but this one isnโ€™t really meant to be slow burn, if that makes any sense at all. Iโ€™m also not a huge murder mystery reader, and a major plot point of this book is Alex investigating one.

I think as a first adult novel for Ms. Bardugo, itโ€™s a good book, and Iโ€™ll likely continue the series to see where it goes. I do really enjoy the paranormal elements involved and exploring the dark side to an elite college.
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From the United States

Blissfullybookish
4.0 out of 5 stars Dark and Gritty - An exceptionally dark read!
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on November 26, 2019
Verified Purchase
It is no secret that I gravitate toward dark aesthetic. While it may not be what my brand exudes, it is a personal favorite of mine. Dark and moody aesthetics influence everything from my makeup choices, to my wardrobe, and even my Lightroom presets. Needless to say, I was immensely excited about Ninth House the minute I heard Leigh talk about it.

Overall, this book did not let me down. It is widely different from the Shadow and Bone trilogy as well as the Six of Crows duology. It is adult, gritty, and somewhat depressing, but most of all it is real. While there are obviously paranormal and magical elements โ€“ it is set in the real world, our world. It deals with real issues that are affecting people today including drug addiction, abusive relationships, mental illness, and rape and is not for the faint of heart.

The Plot
We meet Alex (or Galaxy) Stern as she struggles her way through her first year at Yale. She is not educationally qualified to be attending an Ivy League school, but has gotten wrapped in the seedy underground of the secret societies that take place at Yale. See, Alex has something that makes her unlike anyone else, she can see and interact with ghosts (or Grays as they are known in this world).

Because of her talent, she was recruited by Lethe House, which is the organization that monitors and regulates the paranormal activity of the other eight houses of Yale. The other houses each dabble in different types of magic to further their agenda. In fact, the book opens with Alex attending a ritual that involves members of one of the societies analyzing the insides of a kidnapped hospital patient so they can predict the future of the NY Stock Exchange and NASDAQ markets. This is only one instance of this ritual, which seems to happen routinely for the last several decades and can have different outcomes like improving the ranking of memberโ€™s book on the NY Times Best Sellers list or making a mediocre pop song rise on the chart.

However, something during this particular ritual isโ€ฆ off. We learn that Grays routinely attend these rituals and are drawn to anything that makes them feel more alive like pain, emotions, sex, and the like. They are usually complacent mostly because no one can see them except Alex and as long as someone does not form a connection with them, they are harmless. However, something goes wrong and the Grays get upset and begin beating on their otherworldly barrier. They become completely agitated and Alex is concerned that they will become violent. Thankfully, after a minute, the chaos stops.

Shaken, Alex leaves after the ritual is completed โ€“ but finds that sometime during the night (rituals always happen on Thursdays) that a New Haven resident was murdered. Something about the death does not sit well with Alex and while she cannot prove society involvement, she thinks there is more to meet the eye.

As she investigates the death, we get flashbacks to her bleak previous life, before Lethe, and her induction into the society by her mentor Darlington (who disappeared before the start of the book). Could Darlingtonโ€™s disappearance be tied to the murder of the New Haven resident? Alex intends to find out, all while trying to maintain her job as the resident mediator for the societies and Yale as well as get by as a student and maintain at least passing grades.

The Review

Ninth House was an incredibly engrossing read. While I find myself being fairly good at being able to predict what will happen by the end of the novel, this one I was not successful at. It reads as a mystery and one I was not successful at solving.

I thought Alex was a very different character, since I usually stay away from reading contemporary fiction she came across as much more โ€˜realโ€™ than I am used to reading and I enjoyed the change. However, because it was so real, it is a fairly depressing book. Dealing with so many terrible things that happened in her life leads her to be fairly downtrodden.

I do not consider myself to be easily triggered, and I do not think I was โ€˜triggeredโ€™ from this book as much as I was just depressed during certain parts. This book explicitly describes rape, drug use, physical abuse, and death. It is not a book that should be for the faint of heart and you need to go into reading this with a clear mind and understanding of what this book entails. Some parts are graphic and hard to read, others are entrancing, but none of it is particularly up lifting.

I have seen some reviews complaining that it was boring read โ€“ let me make this clear... This is part one of a long series. Leigh herself has said she hopes to write five or six novels in the Alex Stern series, and honestly this book reads like book one of a long series to me. It sets the groundwork, and the lore that I am sure will be important in the following books. Does that maybe bog some people down, yes, but if you look at it from the perspective of it being one of five or six books it makes sense. Maybe, if you are someone who does not appreciate so much backstory, wait until one or two more come out so you can power read through several at a time.

I do think this book is absolutely worth the read. It is creepy and dark and the perfect October read. We end on a little bit of a cliffhanger and I want to know what happens to these characters as there are SO many questions left unanswered.
Customer image
Blissfullybookish
4.0 out of 5 stars Dark and Gritty - An exceptionally dark read!
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on November 26, 2019
It is no secret that I gravitate toward dark aesthetic. While it may not be what my brand exudes, it is a personal favorite of mine. Dark and moody aesthetics influence everything from my makeup choices, to my wardrobe, and even my Lightroom presets. Needless to say, I was immensely excited about Ninth House the minute I heard Leigh talk about it.

Overall, this book did not let me down. It is widely different from the Shadow and Bone trilogy as well as the Six of Crows duology. It is adult, gritty, and somewhat depressing, but most of all it is real. While there are obviously paranormal and magical elements โ€“ it is set in the real world, our world. It deals with real issues that are affecting people today including drug addiction, abusive relationships, mental illness, and rape and is not for the faint of heart.

The Plot
We meet Alex (or Galaxy) Stern as she struggles her way through her first year at Yale. She is not educationally qualified to be attending an Ivy League school, but has gotten wrapped in the seedy underground of the secret societies that take place at Yale. See, Alex has something that makes her unlike anyone else, she can see and interact with ghosts (or Grays as they are known in this world).

Because of her talent, she was recruited by Lethe House, which is the organization that monitors and regulates the paranormal activity of the other eight houses of Yale. The other houses each dabble in different types of magic to further their agenda. In fact, the book opens with Alex attending a ritual that involves members of one of the societies analyzing the insides of a kidnapped hospital patient so they can predict the future of the NY Stock Exchange and NASDAQ markets. This is only one instance of this ritual, which seems to happen routinely for the last several decades and can have different outcomes like improving the ranking of memberโ€™s book on the NY Times Best Sellers list or making a mediocre pop song rise on the chart.

However, something during this particular ritual isโ€ฆ off. We learn that Grays routinely attend these rituals and are drawn to anything that makes them feel more alive like pain, emotions, sex, and the like. They are usually complacent mostly because no one can see them except Alex and as long as someone does not form a connection with them, they are harmless. However, something goes wrong and the Grays get upset and begin beating on their otherworldly barrier. They become completely agitated and Alex is concerned that they will become violent. Thankfully, after a minute, the chaos stops.

Shaken, Alex leaves after the ritual is completed โ€“ but finds that sometime during the night (rituals always happen on Thursdays) that a New Haven resident was murdered. Something about the death does not sit well with Alex and while she cannot prove society involvement, she thinks there is more to meet the eye.

As she investigates the death, we get flashbacks to her bleak previous life, before Lethe, and her induction into the society by her mentor Darlington (who disappeared before the start of the book). Could Darlingtonโ€™s disappearance be tied to the murder of the New Haven resident? Alex intends to find out, all while trying to maintain her job as the resident mediator for the societies and Yale as well as get by as a student and maintain at least passing grades.

The Review

Ninth House was an incredibly engrossing read. While I find myself being fairly good at being able to predict what will happen by the end of the novel, this one I was not successful at. It reads as a mystery and one I was not successful at solving.

I thought Alex was a very different character, since I usually stay away from reading contemporary fiction she came across as much more โ€˜realโ€™ than I am used to reading and I enjoyed the change. However, because it was so real, it is a fairly depressing book. Dealing with so many terrible things that happened in her life leads her to be fairly downtrodden.

I do not consider myself to be easily triggered, and I do not think I was โ€˜triggeredโ€™ from this book as much as I was just depressed during certain parts. This book explicitly describes rape, drug use, physical abuse, and death. It is not a book that should be for the faint of heart and you need to go into reading this with a clear mind and understanding of what this book entails. Some parts are graphic and hard to read, others are entrancing, but none of it is particularly up lifting.

I have seen some reviews complaining that it was boring read โ€“ let me make this clear... This is part one of a long series. Leigh herself has said she hopes to write five or six novels in the Alex Stern series, and honestly this book reads like book one of a long series to me. It sets the groundwork, and the lore that I am sure will be important in the following books. Does that maybe bog some people down, yes, but if you look at it from the perspective of it being one of five or six books it makes sense. Maybe, if you are someone who does not appreciate so much backstory, wait until one or two more come out so you can power read through several at a time.

I do think this book is absolutely worth the read. It is creepy and dark and the perfect October read. We end on a little bit of a cliffhanger and I want to know what happens to these characters as there are SO many questions left unanswered.
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Carmilla
5.0 out of 5 stars I loved this story. It soak into my bones and was born inside my dreams.
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on October 18, 2019
Verified Purchase
Let me preface by telling everyone that reads this that, Yes this is an adult dark fantasy novel. Yes, there is some sexual assault within the confines of this story - and as a sexual assault survivor, I found Alex's story of healing something I could connect to deeply. There is no fecal fetish porn in this, even though someone suggested such. This is Not a romance. This is NOT Six of Crows, and Alex is NOTHING like Kaz Brekker. They are completely and utterly different characters and stories.

That out of the way, let me tell you that the last week of my life as I savored each word of this uncanny and deep world. I loved this story. It soak into my bones and was born inside my dreams.

Written in a Tarantino method with a prologue that is a scene from toward the end, and the dual Point of Views switch between current working timeline to the past timeline. One is Alex's timeline (current), the other is Darlington's timeline (past). Everything in this story has its own place in foreshadowing, building the mystery, and creating two very unique and well-developed character arcs between Darlington and Alex.

I will also state that this story heavily reminded me of the Divine Comedy with a massive modern twist. Read slow with high comprehension or read it twice, you will miss things and not understand otherwise. The flashbacks with Darlington are incredibly important parts of this story.

Is the story slow? Not if you're paying attention.

Is the magic unique? Yes, absolutely.

Now for some more detailed commentary, there may be spoilers from here on out:

The beginning of this story is incredibly balanced, even with the continued bouncing back and forth of the timeline. We are getting to understand both Alex's point of view, why she took downers (mostly taking non-addictive ones, she was not an addict per-say, she takes drugs to hide from her magic power that connects her to the Grays aka the dead). This starts because she feels unsafe after she's sexually assaulted by a ghost, and discovered after smoking weed for the first time that she can mask her ability.
The story is weaved with realism and unrealistic magic and occult in a way that develops an excellent suspension of disbelief. There is plenty of action and things *happening* to keep you turning the page, but also learning and building the world of Yale and New Haven around you along with the 8 societies and Lethe. The book is exciting throughout, but as we get closer and closer to the prologue part of the timeline, the more intense things get. The story starts REALLY with the murder of a girl, a junkie and a dealer, someone most people wouldn't miss, someone so much like Alex that she can't let it go. So much so that she starts investigating even after she's been told by everyone not to. Her motive is excellent here, Alex sees herself as saving this girl Tara because she couldn't save Hellie. Hellie the girl who died because of a drug dealer, died because of drugs, Hellie, the only person Alex has ever truly loved.
The most significant and important part of this book is toward the end, the big reveal, it's where Alex, who had her tattoos masked by magic, removes the glamour and decides to accept the girl that she is, plus the girl that she has become now. Like I said, this book is about healing.
I couldn't wait to get to the end, and when I did get to the end, I was so enveloped by the damn fact that this book is a Dante's Inferno/ Divine Comedy retelling in it's own magical way. The blocks were there, Darliginton is her Virgil and she is Dante - literally in the names of their duties for Lethe. There are still many questions left and I cannot wait to discover them in book 2.
While this book is set at Yale, New Haven, what is most important is that this book is set in a magic sort of chasm. A place that draws and hones magic. The societies rely primarily on their rites done at their tombs, created by magic as a sort of lightning rod. Bardugo keeps the descriptions tight and integral to the story, while never leaving you with empty spaces. The words always fit the characters and are delicate, elegant, and beautiful.
Darlington and Alex are incredibly real to me, and I would let them both step on me if given the chance, don't @ me. Alex is a healing girl who used drugs to hide from her suffering and is beginning to learn how to become someone knew, but finally realizes she is still herself but changed. Darlington is a good rich gentleman boy, with shit parents, and a grandfather who left him with the deed to his mansion and a heart of gold, and the need to work hard for his money. I connected with Alex almost immediately, being an ex-drug addict who used drugs to deal with my PTSD after multiple traumas and sexual assault. She is something I have never seen represented in fantasy and it felt nice to be seen.
If you like books that dig deep into toxic masculinity, classism, surviving, and healing but also love occult and magic, this book is definitely for you. If you're expecting another Alina or a Kaz, this book is not what you think it is. Keep that in mind and go in with no expectations other than to go on an adventure.
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Ardis Louise Ramey
4.0 out of 5 stars Ninth House Was Everything Iโ€™d Hoped It Would Be
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on January 22, 2020
Verified Purchase
โ€œBut would it have mattered if sheโ€™d been someone else? If sheโ€™d been a social butterfly, they would have said she liked to drink away her pain. If sheโ€™d been a straight-A student, they would have said sheโ€™d been eaten alive by her perfectionism. There were always excuses for why girls d**d.โ€

Leigh Bardugoโ€™s latest book Ninth House is by every measure a success, and itโ€™s easy to see why.

In Ninth House, Alex Stern begins her new life as a student at Yale University. But with her background, and her ability, sheโ€™s not like the other students. In Ninth House we explore, through Alex, a blend of the real and the unreal as she learns about Yaleโ€™s exclusive clubs and their influence, their dealings with magic and ritual and power.

I really wanted to like this book, having loved the first in Bardugoโ€™s Six of Crows duology, but I was aware that a lot of the split reviews hinged on the voice and pacing Bardugo chose for Ninth House. I didnโ€™t know what to expect, and when I first started it I really couldnโ€™t get past the first few pages. However, after walking away for a month, I came back to it and thoroughly enjoyed it in a โ€œcover to coverโ€ kind of way.

Overall, I think itโ€™s an excellent example of the kind of skilled writing Bardugo is bringing to the fantasy genre. You see, like Alex from the book Bardugo went to Yale, studying English, and itโ€™s clear that she learned her lessons well. She successfully avoids a lot of the tropes that popular fantasy writers can fall into. In another author this might read (so to speak) as maturity of voice, but in Bardugo itโ€™s something else. I had this feeling when reading Six of Crows, but in Ninth Gate it was never more than a few page turns away from my awareness.

Bardugoโ€™s writing is clean. Itโ€™s straightforward and poetic together in an excellent balance; itโ€™s clear and evocative and all the things a fantasy writer might aim for (I assume, not being one myself). But Bardugoโ€™s writing is almost clinically clean. Formulaically clean. And I couldnโ€™t quite shake the feeling that I was reading a paint-by-numbers masterpiece. Perhaps, I think, she learned her lessons at Yale too well.

โ€œThe night of the Manuscript party, Darlington spent the early-evening hours with the windows of Black Elm lit, handing out candy, jack-oโ€™-lanterns lining the driveway. He loved this part of Halloween, the ritual of it, the tide of happy strangers arriving on his shores, hands outstretched. Most times Black Elm felt like a dark island, one that had somehow ceased to appear on any chart. Not on Halloween night.โ€

I did also struggle against the need to roll my eyes, hearing again and again just how pleased Bardugo is with herself for attending Yale. Yes, itโ€™s a great accomplishment. Yes, Yale is the perfect setting for this story, and her experience there makes her uniquely qualified to tell this story well. But there was just a tidbit too much smug self-importance shining through in those early chapters for my taste. Not enough to turn me off by any means. Just enough for me to have left some small snarky comments in the margins.

Even so, I did thoroughly enjoy this book. In fact, Iโ€™m fairly sure itโ€™ll be my first reread of 2020. I liked it so well Iโ€™m so bummed to find that the sequel isnโ€™t expected until 2021 (and is untitled). Because Iโ€™m not done with this story. Iโ€™m not done with the world, or the characters, or the narratives that we only got a glimpse of during the course of this book. Simply: Iโ€™m hooked.

Many people (most of them fans of Bardugoโ€™s earlier work) complained that Ninth House had pacing issues, particularly a slow start in the first half. With those folks I strongly disagree. Bardugo chose a different pacing style for this book than Iโ€™ve seen from her before and it suited this narrative perfectly, allowing the story to unfold organically as we experience it along a disjointed timeline, and allowing moments in the story to illuminate the characters and setting gracefully.

When it comes to the characters, setting, and plot, I have nothing to say but good things. Sheโ€™s a skilled author who knows her craft, and in Ninth House multiple complex characters play important roles in interwoven plots without pulling the readerโ€™s attention from the whole. And on top of it all is woven an incredibly unique magical system and just tons and tons of ghosts.

She did an excellent job introducing and then twisting the familiar concept of secret societies full of students and backed by powerful alums up to no good in the shadows. Iโ€™ll admit โ€“ that tropeโ€™s been my jam since Gilmore Girls was on the air, but Bardugo really accomplished something fascinating with that starting point, creating something exciting and darkly fascinating, horrific and just slightly too believable.

I love, too, that sheโ€™s not afraid to leave things unanswered. Yes, there will be a second book. But Bardugo didnโ€™t sprinkle a couple of questions near the end to motivate a sequel. She left multiple things unanswered about characters, plot, motivation, and the structure of the world simply because doing so makes the story feel more alive, less contrived than witnessed.

All in all, I truly, deeply enjoyed reading Ninth House. It was everything Iโ€™d hoped it would be, and I hate that I have to wait at least a bakerโ€™s dozen months before I can read the sequel. Thereโ€™s enough world here to support a lengthy series, it seems to me. I canโ€™t wait to see what comes next.
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P. Sundby
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing!
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on February 1, 2023
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This story has so many things going on that it's difficult to nail it down into one nice, neat genre. Urban fantasy, with a hint of dark academia, except that it's really not, because although it's set on a college campus, it's not a school for magic... but magic is happening within the bones of the school. Add to that a set of secret societies and murder, and you have a delightfully complex story that grabs you and doesn't let go.

College life and both the very real dangers and everyday stressors a student might encounter are a large part of the story, and the FMC must navigate that, while also juggling the shadows of her past, the demanding side job that got her a place at the school in the first place, and a murder investigation. The victim is a girl that she has a unique empathy for, despite having never met, and her lived experience gives her insight into the case that the investigator doesn't grasp, as well as the determination to not let another girl be cast aside simply because of the choices she made while trying to survive.

Is there romance? It's hard to say, though there are the seeds of a slow-burn here. The side characters are so well-developed and the friendships grow in such a natural way, that it's not something you feel you need to keep the pages turning.

The FMC is a really interesting character in her own right, with a backstory that feels heartbreakingly believable and create an impressive amount of trust issues and snark as a result, but she never wastes time complaining about her lot in life or waiting for someone to come fix her problems. She is a go-getter, a bit reckless of her own safety but loyal to a fault when it comes to protecting her friends, and while she might not have the book-smart background of your typical Yale student, she is incredibly intelligent as well as street smart.

I absolutely loved this story and cannot wait to read the next installment. I highly recommend this book to anyone who loves the kind of magic that seeps out around the edges of real life, hiding in plain sight, and the kind of female protagonist who might be a little morally gray and isn't afraid to get her hands dirty fighting for the underdog.
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Mikaela T
VINE VOICE
5.0 out of 5 stars Dark, grimy, and all the more wonderful
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on April 29, 2023
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In fantasy, thereโ€™s whimsy and then thereโ€™s this. Ninth house is a world where magic has to be extracted, collected and has a long history of getting out of hand.
Alex is recruited to be a magical monitor of the 8 secret societies practicing within Yale. While others are desperate to push the limits of their powers, Alex is far more pragmatic. Clock in, supervise, clock out and try not to fail her classes. But Hogwarts turns sinister when a muggle girl is murdered and Alex is convinced that magic was involved.
The plot never un-thickens! Questions and secrets and more questions until the very end. I need book two.
Also I read Alexโ€™s voice in my head as Detective Angela Lopez from The Rookie ๐Ÿ˜‚
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P. Whiting
5.0 out of 5 stars Wowsers, what a ride!
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on April 5, 2023
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I enjoyed Ms Bardugo's Grisha young adult novels so was curious about this adult book. Was NOT disappointed! It's set in the New Haven/Yale of today, but with plenty of supernatural elements. As a Yale grad herself, she made the setting very real. I've heard of Yale's secretive "houses", like Skull & Bones, but here they each practice different sorts of arcane magic/rituals to manipulate people/things to ensure the success of alumni. The Ninth House is tasked with keeping an eye on all the others to prevent dangerous magics from running amuck. The focus is to keep ghosts, who are evidently EVERYWHERE, from interfering with the rituals. To this end a troubled young woman from LA who is defiantly NOT Yale material is recruited because she can see ghosts (the other Ninth House members can only see ghosts by taking a dangerous & short-lived brew). There is magic and mayhem aplenty, along with the struggle of culture shock and trying not to flunk out of Yale when studying & classes take second place to chasing ghosts & solving murders. A very enjoyable can't-put-it-down read.
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Kourtney Saavedra
4.0 out of 5 stars took a while to get into, but enjoyed overall
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on May 27, 2023
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Honestly I considered not finishing this โ€” about 40% of the way in, I started to enjoy it. I will definitely be thinking about this for a while because I enjoyed the combination of magic + history + present day
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K. A. Y.
VINE VOICE
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the most original novels I've read in a long time!
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on November 9, 2019
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NINTH HOUSE is the first book I have read by author Leigh Bardugo, and I have already purchased several other novels by her, based on the writing style alone. She captured my attention from the first page, and managed to give enough "new" information for me to process all throughout this story. The result was a novel that I hated to put down at any place.

"Rich or poor, all are equal in death . . . "

Alex (Galaxy) Stern is a young woman that spent her life trying to hide away from the fact that she was very . . . different. She was able to see ghosts ("Grays") from the day she was born. A curse that kept her from blending in and living a "normal" life, until the day she got an offer from Yale.

Alex would get a free ride, contingent upon her joining their secretive Lethe House, where she would help monitor supernatural events and experiments in private societies on campus.

"The greatest gift Lethe had given Alex . . . was the knowledge, the certainty that the things she saw were real and always had been . . . "

Bardugo has constructed a complex and thrilling novel involving dynamic characters, supernatural phenomena, mysterious histories, secret societies, and danger threaded all throughout. The societies and their "origins" were so well detailed that each and every event felt entirely plausible in the setting.

". . . This town is a peculiar one. The Veil is thinner here . . . "

There wasn't just one main character that stood out here. I found that many of them were so individual in their behaviors and beliefs that they were equally as important to me as Alex was.

". . . He didn't know how precious a normal life could be, how easy it was to drift away from average . . . "

As the events began, I felt as if I were learning along with Alex--a student, myself--permitted entrance into possibly THE most exclusive and wondrous of societies. The stark change from the world she left behind, to the one she now sought to integrate into, was astronomical. Her character's sarcastic wit and ability to make quick decisions helped blend this transition into something the reader could go along with.

"Maybe good things were the same as the bad things. Sometimes you just had to let them happen."

I really enjoyed how Bardugo painted the demeanor of the privileged college students, verses those that lived in the towns just outside of Yale's domain. The differences were illustrated in casual comments, the clothing worn, professors who had students working as hired help--all to create the sense of inequality better than words alone ever could.

". . . there was a big difference between things being fair and things being set right."

Then, there was the magical "world" that was Lethe--where they were tasked with overseeing the elaborate rituals involving the supernatural, mixed with the needs and desires of the rich and powerful--all done in secrecy from the main body of the common population. THIS is the area that had me hooked on every sentence penned.

". . . That was what magic did. It revealed the heart of who you'd been before life took away your belief in the possible . . . "

Overall, I was incredibly impressed with my first novel from Leigh Bardugo. Her writing style kept my attention from first to last page, giving just enough information at a time to keep you begging for more. The world she created was complex, and yet believable--with the elite of Yale in contrast to the world surrounding the University, you could believe that some of these people were able to pierce the "barrier" for their own gain.

". . . needed to believe that there was something more to the world than living and dying . . . "

Add in some dynamic, three dimensional characters, and you have a book that covers all the major bases. I plan on reading some of the author's earlier novels, and will eagerly be awaiting her next.

Highly recommended!
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Archer
4.0 out of 5 stars Secret Socities and Magic
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on May 17, 2023
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Not my normal reading fare, but I really got into this. I've never wanted to relate less to a character as I did Galaxy Stern.
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Kindle Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars What a concept!
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on May 24, 2023
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What if all those College societies really could raise the dead? Summon magic? Change your fortune? Bardugo created an exciting new world and heroine.
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