Throne of Glass

A long fantasy binge that starts as assassin competition and expands into epic stakes.

Read our full review and verdict: is Throne of Glass worth reading? ->

Book report preview

Throne of Glass book report

A trained assassin claws her way out of a slave camp and into a kingdom-spanning competition: a fun, romance-laced fantasy opener that gets considerably better as the series goes on.

B+
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The gist

Celaena Sardothien, the kingdom’s most feared assassin, is pulled from a slave labor camp to compete as the king’s champion in a deadly tournament that could win her freedom. The first book reads as competent, entertaining YA fantasy with court politics and a budding love triangle; the series uses it as a launching pad into a much bigger, darker, and more ambitious story.

Best format Read or listen; commit to at least book three before judging the series
Read it if You want a capable heroine, court intrigue, a love triangle, and a fantasy series built for a long binge.
Skip it if You want airtight worldbuilding from page one, or you dislike love-triangle structures.
Readability 5/5
Fast, breezy, easy to binge
Worldbuilding 3/5
Thin in book one, expands hugely later
Romance payoff 4/5
A real love-triangle engine from the start
Character growth 5/5
Celaena becomes one of the series’ best arcs over time
Series payoff 5/5
The series gets significantly better than its opener
The honest critique

Book one is the weakest entry in the series: the worldbuilding is generic, the central competition has low stakes for a supposedly legendary assassin, and some early characterization reads more like wish-fulfillment than earned competence. Readers who bounce off book one are bouncing off the floor of the series, not its ceiling. The payoff for sticking around is real, but it requires patience the first book does not fully earn on its own.

How to actually apply it

Make the page useful after you close the tab.

Manage your expectations for book one

Treat it as a fun, fast setup rather than the series’ best material. The real ambition shows up starting around Heir of Fire.

Track the right question

Do not just track who Celaena ends up with. Track how her sense of identity changes as the series reveals more about who she really is.

Use the reading order

Place The Assassin’s Blade after Heir of Fire rather than first, even though it is a prequel. It lands with more emotional weight once you have more context.

Where people go wrong

They judge the whole series by its YA-leaning opener and miss the much larger, darker fantasy epic it grows into.

Questions to make you think

We will not answer these for you. The point is to ask better questions.

  • Am I judging this as a standalone book or as the opening chapter of a much longer story?
  • What does Celaena’s competence mean to her identity, separate from anyone she might end up with?
  • Which relationship in the love triangle is actually about partnership, and which is about who she used to be?
  • Am I willing to give a series three books to prove its ambition?
Take this with you Throne of Glass by Sarah J. Maas Save the note, copy the link, or use the quick decider before committing.
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Why readers reach for it

fantasy + assassin heroine

A long fantasy binge that starts as assassin competition and expands into epic stakes.

Throne of Glass: quick answers

Is Throne of Glass worth reading?

A trained assassin claws her way out of a slave camp and into a kingdom-spanning competition: a fun, romance-laced fantasy opener that gets considerably better as the series goes on.

Who should read Throne of Glass?

You want a capable heroine, court intrigue, a love triangle, and a fantasy series built for a long binge.

Who should skip Throne of Glass?

You want airtight worldbuilding from page one, or you dislike love-triangle structures.

What is the best way to read Throne of Glass?

Read or listen; commit to at least book three before judging the series

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