City of Lost Souls (novel)

City of Lost Souls
Author Cassandra Clare
Cover artist Cliff Nielsen
Country United States
Language English
Series The Mortal Instruments
Genre fantasy, Adventure
Publisher Margaret K. McElderry
Publication date
May 8, 2012
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages 544 pp (hardback, first edition)
ISBN 978-1442416864
Preceded by City of Fallen Angels
Followed by City of Heavenly Fire

City of Lost Souls is the fifth book in the The Mortal Instruments series by Cassandra Clare.[1][2][3] City of Lost Souls was released on May 8, 2012 and was followed by the sixth and final book in the series, City of Heavenly Fire in 2014.

Plot

The book opens with Simon returning home, and then he finds out that there are a lot of symbols that form a barrier so he can't enter the house. After that, he talked to his mom, only to feel more rejected when she says he killed the "real" Simon. Things become more tense when he learns from Clary that Jace is currently missing and untraceable. Clary and the rest of the group manages to gain the assistance of the Seelie Queen, but at the cost of two Faerie rings that would allow the wearers to communicate telepathically. Desperate, Clary agrees to the terms and while searching for the rings in a Shadowhunter library, accidentally observes Jace enter the library and speak in friendly terms with Sebastian- which confuses Clary, who had been hiding during the conversation.

That night Clary wakes to find Jace lying in bed with her, asking her to come with him. Shortly after this, Sebastian enters the room- something that is discovered by Jocelyn, who screams and alerts others to their presence. The two leave, but promise to return for Clary. She eventually decides to join the two men as a spy while using the Faerie rings to communicate with Simon. During this time Clary realizes that Jace has been possessed by Sebastian, as he acts more like Sebastian than himself. Jace manages to temporarily shake off the possession and explain that Sebastian is planning to use Lilith's blood to create an army of dark Shadowhunters using the second Mortal Cup and will turn himself into the Clave, as he'd rather die than continue to be possessed. He was only able to regain control due to the rune controlling him having received damage, which would also cause him to eventually die. Not wanting Jace's death, Clary calls Sebastian in and asks him to heal the rune. Meanwhile, Simon and the others summon Raziel, who gives Simon a blade of Heaven named Glorious but at the cost of Simon's Mark of Cain.

Clary is later shown to be searching Sebastian's room, where she discovers her Faerie ring. She manages to alert Simon of most of Sebastian's plan and tells him to come to the Seventh Sacred Site, but is caught midway through by Sebastian and is forced to destroy the Faerie ring. The two then fight and Sebastian unsuccessfully tries to rape Clary, who manages to escape. She ends up going to the Seventh Site, where Simon gives Clary Raziel's sword, which she uses to hunt Sebastian. Unable to reach Sebastian, Clary uses the Angel blade and stabs Jace, believing that it won't kill him as his heart is more good than evil. Jace is set alight, leading the others to believe that he is dead.

Sebastian flees the battle, most of his dark Shadowhunters dead. Jace is discovered to be alive and he's taken back to the Institute for healing. When she's finally allowed to visit Jace, she learns that stabbing him with Glorious has filled him with "sacred fire", which will burn anything he touches whenever he gets an adrenaline rush. Magnus ends up breaking up with Alec due to Camille's offer to strip Magnus of his immortality, as Alec had truly considered accepting the offer despite him ultimately refusing. Upset, Alec sets out to kill Camille but discovers Maureen, who tells him that she has killed Camille in order to gain leadership over her vampire clan by vampire law.

Reception

Critical reception has been mixed.[4] Kirkus Reviews wrote a mixed review for City of Lost Souls, writing that the sections focusing on Clary's POV "[focus] on her wardrobe instead of her character development" while also stating that "Fans of the familiar will find this an unchallenging goth-and-glitter pleasure."[5] The Manila Bulletin was more positive and remarked that the book was much improved over the previous entry (City of Fallen Angels) but still felt that "at its core the book's plot is once again a retread of the first three books in "The Mortal Instruments" - the only difference is that the supernatural elements have been inverted."[6] The Horn Book Guide wrote a brief review for City of Lost Souls, writing "More a series of incidents than a full-fledged story, the book's main pleasure is in following the continuing adventures of these familiar characters."[7]

References

  1. Bond, Gwenda (Jul 2012). "City of Lost Souls (review)". Locus Online. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  2. Truitt, Brian. "Cover reveal of Cassandra Clare's 'City of Lost Souls'". USA Today. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  3. "See the trailer for 'City of Lost Souls' by Cassandra Clare -- EXCLUSIVE". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  4. "City of Lost Souls: The Mortal Instruments, Book 5 (review)". Commonsensemedia. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  5. "City of Lost Souls (review)". Kirkus Reviews. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  6. "A Far More Entertaining Read". Manila Bulletin (subscription required). July 6, 2012. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  7. Bennett - Zendzian, Amy (Spring 2013). "Clare, Cassandra: City of Lost Souls (review)". Horn Book Guide 24 (1): 91. Retrieved 19 August 2014.


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