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starryeyedjen

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Clockwork Prince (The Infernal Devices, #2) -  Ed Westwick,  Heather Lind, Cassandra Clare **This review is for the hardcover & audiobook combined.**

I actually read Clockwork Prince last December when it was released because Cassie Clare is on my auto-buy/immediately read list.  That, and I absolutely loved Clockwork Angel when I read it the previous year and was eager to transport myself back to the Shadowhunter world.  However, I dwelled on it for a bit and never wrote a proper review of the book.  Then, recently, I was provided the opportunity to review the audiobook, and I can honestly say this story was just as good the second time around.  And now it's time I write a more appropriate review of the book I currently deem "my favorite Cassie Clare novel thus far".  So, here goes...

I think it's fair to say that the common thread throughout Clare's work is that "to love is to destroy" and vice versa.  (I think Jace even says as much in one of The Mortal Instruments books.)  In Clockwork Prince, we finally find out why Will is so tortured and why he treats his closest companions the way he does, even when it's clear that he cares about them.  But let me tell you, Will in love is kind of a stark-raving lunatic, though I love his character even more now that I know what he's suffered.  Of course, Jem is still caring and attentive, as always, and it would be impossible not to like him.  I think it speaks volumes that the author was able to make me fall for both boys.  I would be hard-pressed to pick a favorite character in this series, though Tessa's strength and honor and courage definitely keep her in the running.

If all love triangles were written like this one and that of Cynthia Hand's Unearthly series, I might just have to reconsider my previous feelings concerning the over-use of this particular plot device.  A lot of time is spent focused on the various relationships in this novel, but if you ask me, it's time well spent.  The relationships -- and their consequences -- only serve to propel the story further and provide a background for the time period and how social interactions were handled at the time.

However, the great characterization and relationship-centric plot did lend an air of predictability to the novel.  But even though this was my second time experiencing this story, and I already knew what was coming, that ending still felt like a punch in the gut.  When the journey is as captivating as this one, though, sometimes you can overlook the obvious and just enjoy the ride.  And I'm sure I'll be enjoying this one again and again.

As far as the audio goes, I couldn't have asked for more perfect narrators for this story.  Heather Lind is phenomenal as the voice of Tessa, and although Ed Westwick's accent had me swooning long before I started this audiobook, he was even more perfect as the voice of tormented Will than I could have imagined.  And to hear Chuck Bass providing the voice of a flamboyant werewolf was just priceless.  Also, hilarious.  I was wary of how this novel would be split into a dual narrative considering the story is told in third person and from several viewpoints throughout the novel, but it was handled beautifully.  The transitions between narrators were always clean and consistent.  I may have enjoyed the audio more than actually reading the novel myself, but I'll never tell.  I hope that Heather and Ed return for the third book; I just don't think it would be the same without them.

This review also appears at The Starry-Eyed Revue.

Thanks to Simon & Schuster Audio/Audiobook Jukebox for providing the audiobook for review.