Dead Ever After
2013 • 338 pages

Ratings65

Average rating2.9

15

The last Sookie Stackhouse book. sigh

Let me tell you first off that this review will have spoilers because I can't talk about this without talking about it. We do start off with a rant here, not necessarily about the book, but about the whiny naysayers out there.

After I finished the book I looked at some reviews on GoodReads and Shelfari and I was surprised to see so many one star reviews. I mean, it wasn't the best book in the series, but shit got tied up and that's good enough for me. Charlaine Harris isn't writing the Great American Novel. She's written a tacky romance series with bad sex scenes and for some reason it's incredibly appealing. So shut up already. One of the most common complaints was that Sookie didn't end up with Eric and wasn't turned. I'm sorry, but if you want to read a book where the ‘heroine' ends up a vampire and married to a vampire go read Twilight. This is a different story.

It's completely ridiculous the entitlement that readers have. You did not write this series. You did not create this world or give birth onto pages these characters. Sure, you invested money into the books and fell in love with characters, but come on. You don't get to say what happens to anyone and you shouldn't whine when it doesn't go the way you wanted it to. I get being disappointed, truly I do, but seriously, get over it. If you don't like it there's this thing called ‘fan fiction' - go write some. But I suppose like most, if you can't write, critique.

Oh, and to those people who said that the whole Sam thing was way out of left field? You're idiots. Plain and simple. Since the first book I knew that someday Sookie would end up with Sam. Good god people, Harris has been building that one up for YEARS. If you didn't see that coming I don't know what to tell you.

And all that above is the reason why so many gave the book one star reviews. Because they were being children who didn't get what they wanted.

That being said, the book was different. We were taken out of Sookie's head for the first time ever as she touched upon different characters. It was disconcerting and I truly didn't feel like I was reading a Sookie book until I was back with her. It wasn't bad, it was just different.

There was too much going on. I understand that she wanted to bring back as many characters as she could to tie up loose ends and to cement Sookie's life in place, but the whole devil/Copley thing was completely unnecessary. Didn't need it, didn't add anything to the story as a whole and ended up being pretty anticlimactic. And instead of having that business in there maybe she could've given more attention to the Eric/Sookie debacle. I mean, it has been this huge thing that's driven the entire series so maybe spend a little more than a couple chapters on the demise of the relationship. It was all so rushed. We're introduced to a major new character (Karin) and then just kind of, ‘well, see ya, bye.'

Everything did work out in the end and maybe that's what pissed people off? But like I said, this stuff is fluff. It was entertaining, but I don't need to sit and ponder about it. It did what it should have done and entertained me for a couple of hours.

I can't say I'm sad it's over. After probably the 5th book I was just kind of, ‘meh'. I was reading just because it was something to read. But I'm glad there's an ending and I don't have to read about Bill anymore.

May 21, 2013