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The way i used to be book
The way i used to be book










the way i used to be book the way i used to be book

But she also fills it with ghosts, sinister and seedy and terrifying. And Alex is expected less to keep the Houses in line than she is to clean up after them.īardugo fills the Yale campus with rich, luxurious details: the way the panels of the library “glowed amber, a burnished golden hive, less a library than a temple ” how a glamorous professor flavors her tea with fresh mint that she grows in window boxes in her office. They’re getting their power by preying on the less powerful, particularly the townspeople of New Haven. Vox-mark vox-mark vox-mark vox-mark vox-markīut as Alex settles into her new life, she realizes that the eight Houses aren’t just getting their power through magic. Her ability to see Grays is so rare and so valuable that in exchange for her services, Lethe is willing to give her a full ride. And Alex has been recruited to be a new member of Lethe, a watchdog organization that is supposed to keep Yale’s eight Houses of the Veil in line. And that was enough to get her in the door at Yale.Īt Yale, the ghosts are called Grays, and they’re everywhere - especially around the secret societies where the rich and powerful perform dark occult rituals to become even richer and more powerful. She’s not exactly a natural fit.īut what Alex does have is the ability to see ghosts.

the way i used to be book

She was recently the sole survivor of a horrific multiple homicide involving her drug dealer boyfriend. She’s a 20-year-old high school dropout from SoCal. The only thing going through my mind was Bardugo’s haunted, corrupt, and magical Yale, and Alex Stern, struggling to make her way through it.Īlex is a freshman at Yale, but she isn’t like the rest of her classmates: She doesn’t have the money or the grades or the social clout to fit in at such an elite institution. It’s so immersive that, reading it, I felt myself pulled back into the way I used to read as a child, curled up with a book and disappearing into its pages so thoroughly that it didn’t seem possible that anything else in the world could ever have existed. Ninth House, the first adult novel by YA superstar Leigh Bardugo, is the kind of book that begs to be read at 2 in the morning, under the covers, with a flashlight in your hand and snacks at your elbow.












The way i used to be book