---
product_id: 260582944
title: "Heir of Fire"
brand: "sarah j. maas"
price: "23116CFA"
currency: XOF
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 6
url: https://www.desertcart.sn/products/260582944-heir-of-fire
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---

# Heir of Fire

**Brand:** sarah j. maas
**Price:** 23116CFA
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Heir of Fire by sarah j. maas
- **How much does it cost?** 23116CFA with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.sn](https://www.desertcart.sn/products/260582944-heir-of-fire)

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- sarah j. maas enthusiasts

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## Description

Heir of Fire

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | #409,391 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #4 in Teen & Young Adult Fantasy Action & Adventure #549 in Teen & Young Adult Fantasy Romance #690 in Teen & Young Adult Sword & Sorcery Fantasy |
| Book 3 of 7  | Throne Of Glass |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (143,662) |
| Dimensions  | 5.55 x 1.65 x 8.3 inches |
| Edition  | Reprint |
| Grade level  | 10 - 12 |
| ISBN-10  | 1619630672 |
| ISBN-13  | 978-1619630673 |
| Item Weight  | 1.01 pounds |
| Language  | English |
| Print length  | 592 pages |
| Publication date  | September 1, 2015 |
| Publisher  | Bloomsbury YA |
| Reading age  | 14 years and up |

## Images

![Heir of Fire - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81QaOS36qXL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 5.0 out of 5 stars







  
  
    Heir of Fire Miniature Character Collection
  

*by R***E on Reviewed in the United Arab Emirates 🇦🇪 on 22 March 2020*

This is a Miniature Character Collection, the book size is 145cm x 98cm with a reading font size 5 - 6pt definitely pocket-friendly but if you're to read this in a moving vehicle it's not advisable. I received it in a protected packaging, delivery took 2 weeks as estimated.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    This Book is Character Development
  

*by S***S on Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 22 October 2014*

Heir of Fire by Sarah J. MaasSteph's Rating: 5 starsOverall Rating: 5 starsSteph's Review: *the review itself is for the most part non-spoiler, but the area for my predictions is packed with spoilers for Heir of Fire*What better way to get back into blogging than with a book that also ended with a bang? I think I've read Heir of Fire three or four times over the one month period that it's been out--in other words, I've just been reading some sort of page from this pretty much every day. Still not over it either. The pretty hardcover is still sitting on my nightstand even though I've got other selections I'm reading. The books in this series release pretty far apart from each other so this obsession is really not good seeing as I've got at least another eleven months to go before book four rolls around.Celaena has been cast away from Adarlan for her own safety by none other than Chaol Westfall. She's ignoring her duty to the King while she's slumming it in the streets of Wendlyn. She is approached by a menacing Fae warrior, who leads her on orders to the her aunt, and Fae Queen, Maeve. Celaena knows Maeve knows the information that she dearly needs to accomplish solving the mystery of Adarlan's seemingly overnight triumph, but Maeve is withholding that knowledge with a series of conditions. She is sent back to the peaceful demi-Fae town of Mystward, to master her heritage and the magic that has quietly dwelled within her for over ten years. If she proves successful and rediscovers her conscience, she may become the biggest living threat that Adarlan has ever seen. If she fails...everything is over for Terrasen.Now, I've read tons of reviews for this one. Many people give it five start but then go onto say that it wasn't their favorite book in the series since Crown of Midnight is still their absolute fave. I too, and giving it those five big, obnoxious stars but Heir of Fire is my favorite book within this series so far. I love Crown of Midnight, I do, but I still felt like Crown of Midnight is a "thriller" book of sorts. It's a roller coaster that is exciting and something you'll always remember (at least for me), but once it's over, it's over. Heir of Fire is a much deeper book because of its fantastic character development. In fact, I think this entire book is pretty much dedicated into recreating Celaena's character that will define her for the rest of the series. Heir of Fire is an intermission of sorts, but at the same time also the bridge that is going to connect two vastly differing parts of this series--and I love the new Celaena. HoF also is just a big staging book; its triple POV/triple setting sets up lots of great subplots that will definitely become major contributions to the rest of the story.There's a lot of mystery shrouding the whole series, but I'd like to think some of that is made known to us with this novel. Along with Celaena's character development, Maas gives us a lot of flashbacks to Celaena's childhood that tell us why Celaena is how she is. The background is a heartbreaking tale and I have to take back every bad thing I said about Celaena--her arrogance, brattiness, and selfishness--that I said about her when I wrote my first thoughts on Throne of Glass. Troubling times are ahead for her, but as long as she stays on the course that she's paved anew, she is going to reach the goal she seeks.While there is a large focus on Celaena herself, Maas also starts brewing trouble in places Celaena is not even in. Chaol begins to question everything he's ever been trained to know about Adarlan--and also wonders if he's going to follow through with the deal he made with his father to return to his homeland and become the Lord of Anielle whilst giving up his honorable position as Captain of the Guard. Dorian is wondering how much more of his father's dictatorship and oppression he can take, especially when he has two secrets that are imperative to keep hidden from him. Either one of them could ruin him and earn him exile at the least-- and at worst, he'll be digging his own grave if either one is found out.I feel like with every book, Sarah J Maas improves her writing to be ever more meticulous than the preceding installment. Her craft is expanding, and I love absolutely everything about it. Can't wait for the next book and also, her new series, A Court of Thorns and Roses!From Here on Out, There WILL be spoilers for Heir of Fire. These are my predictions for the book 4 that I wrote a while back after my first round of reading. Read at your own risk!******************My thoughts and predictions based on what happened in Heir of Fire: If somehow you didn't get the message earlier, there will be some spoilers from here on out for HoF!!!1. Manon Blackbeak.I enjoyed reading her POV. This girl is a badass, and she needs to show all the other witchies who's boss. She was such an underdog at the start of the book I feel like (because she chose the "injured" wyvern), but in the end she showed them she was better than everyone else.So my prediction for her: I think she will clash with Celaena at first, (somehow I feel like it might actually be in book 5, I'll get to the why for that later) but begin to understand that the King is just using them, and who knows, might not actually keep his end of the bargain. If Celaena continues to represent the freedom she is so far, I think Manon and her crew will eventually side with her for the big showdown.2. Chaol:I'm sorry, I am no longer on board the ship Chaolaena (rd to #4 as to why :D). I think after Chaol's errr falling out with the King, he will find Celaena and reconcile what happened between them in CoM. I also think Chaol isn't going to be as supportive of the growing Terrasen uprising as we want him to be, since he is still from Adarlan, but in the very least he isn't going to be fighting for the king. As said in the book, he'll fight for Dorian (who I hope will eventually side with Celaena)3. Dorian.No. NO NO NO NO NO NO. I'm terrified that Dorian might end up dead, now that he's got that stinking collar around his neck. Since Celaena had to kill the Valg princes (and those collars STILL weren't broken even then)…I just have a bad feeling. But IF everything goes well and Celaena and Chaol can save Dorian from his father's clutches, I know Dorian will be on Celaena's side.4. Rowan WhitethornMy fave new character. I really wish he and Celaena didn't separate at the end of HoF, after all Rowan said that Mala thinks they make a good pair. I totally ship Rowan + Celaena now….but I also feel like this isn't ever going to happen. Maas made it clear several times in the book that Celaena / Rowan only felt platonic love for each other and only have the urge to protect each other because they have the carranam bond. Plus, Rowan's already lost his mate and it's also been said that mating bonds go beyond death. A girl can still hope though ;) As long as this book has MORE ROWAN, I'm satisfied. I wonder if we are still going to have a little bit of his POV, seeing as the duo is separated now.Now for less explanation predictions:5. I think Celaena is going to return to Rifthold to find Arobynn at the Assassin's Keep and demand for the Amulet of Orynth, which he probably refuses to give her. He probably won't be surprised that she shows up, and probably already knows her heritage at that. I doubt that he knows about the Wyrdkeys though. I hope she kills him, and doesn't fall for any of his sweet talk.--This is the 'why' for Manon's prediction. If more of the book is going to focus on Celaena's return to Rifthold, I can't see Manon and crew attacking her yet. Maybe at the end of the book, or in book 5?6. Maeve is going to come back to haunt Celaena. Maybe not in the next book, but when the "revolution" gets bigger, I feel like Celaena is going to be on the verge of victory to have her plans foiled by that Fae Queen.7. Do I smell and Celaena/Ansel alliance coming?--On that note in general, maybe the Silent Assassins from the prequels?8. Please let them save Aedion (or have Aedion break himself out). I feel like if Aedion dies, all of the character development in HoF might crash into bits and pieces. I need to see a reunion between these two.9. I think the King might find out about Celaena/Aelin in the next book, but as much as I want to see him dead, I don't think he will be AT LEAST until the end of book 5 at the soonest.I'll update with more predictions as I think of them, and I also feel like these are my predictions for the overall rest of the series instead of solely book 4 :)--Steph @ A Walk on Words

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    Absolutely brilliant!
  

*by T***N on Reviewed in India 🇮🇳 on 17 October 2018*

This month, I started a reread of the series to prepare for the upcoming and highly anticipated release of Kingdom of Ash, the conclusion to Aelin’s (Celaena’s) story.At one point during my initial read of Throne of Glass, I was contemplating giving up on the series, and might not have picked up Heir of Fire at all. After reading ToG and CoM, I didn’t understand what all the fuss was about, since this series was a favourite of so many people I knew. Honestly, I didn’t like them that much at all the first time I read them. The writing was poor, especially the excessive use of exclamation marks which made me pause and cringe every time I came across it. The overused addressing of Celaena as “the Assassin” or Dorian as “the Prince” and Chaol as “the Captain” too was terrible, as if shoving their titles in my face repeatedly would make them seem more important and powerful. It just ended up annoyed me. And I didn’t feel particularly connected to any of the characters (I did love Celaena though) or invested in the story.But I gave this series one last chance to redeem itself, and it did not disappoint. Heir of Fire pulled me in like none of the other books had, and carved itself a special place in my heart. From here onward, the Throne of Glass series too a major turn, a turn that set it on the course of becoming one of my favourite series’. It was the book that made you either more interested and invested in the story, or hate it with all your heart. There is no in-between. I’ve read reviews that call it slow or boring or downright awful, stating that the series took a wrong turn and went in a direction that completely veered off from what it started out as. Fortunately, it was just what I needed.Heir of Fire is the story of Celaena Sardothian on her journey to becoming Aelin Ashryver Galathynius. It’s Celaena healing from her past, from all the atrocities she’s witnessed, from believing shes worthless, from what she was forced to endure. It’s her coming back, from that edge she was about to tip over, when Nehemia says “don’t let the light go out”. Celaena and Aelin are two distinctly different people. And her transformation is one of the best written I’ve ever encountered. It’s so realistic and portrays her struggles in such a way that you are stunned by the depth of what you have read. She has to accept herself and forgive herself for her past. She has to shoulder her responsibility. She has to claim her birthright."She was Aelin Ashryver Galathynius, and she would not be afraid"Rereads add something to the story that is lost the first time. Maybe you just pay more attention, maybe the details stick in your mind better… But the feelings invoked are stronger, and you appreciate the story more. I’m still in awe over how Aelin’s journey was handled, and I don’t think that was too important to me the first time I read it. Heaps of information I’d forgotten were brought back, which is not particularly important or integral to the story but what I find rather interesting such as the crossing the witches made from the wastes across the White Fang mountains and Ruhnns after magic disappeared. The loss of magic meant their brooms didn’t work anymore and they started to age again, so they couldn’t survive in the wastes. I loved these little details that added so much depth to the story, as it built up the world beautifully.Another thing that was amazing was Aelin’s and Rowan’s friendship. It does develop into a romantic relationship I know, but it was just so pure and refreshing here. Both of them, broken and scarred people, finding happiness again by helping each other… And I’m glad that it’s not that insta-love rubbish, because nothing, nothing, puts me off more. True love after you just meet a person? *scoffs* This is how it’s supposed to be. Respect and friendship. It seems perfectly reasonable that they should fall in love in the near future, after truly knowing each other.Rowan is the most stubborn, arrogant and prideful idiot in the whole of Erilea, and I love him to bits. I don’t think anyone else could have helped bring Aelin back as well as he did, especially because he is probably the only person who went through something that was somewhat similar (though not even close to what Aelin did). He understood her, and gave her just the amount of space she needed, but also knew when to step in and help. They make such a good team, honestly. Under all the “I don’t care about anyone, and I don’t need any friends” attitude, he’s an actual cinnamon roll who desperately wants to be understood. He’s also the most responsible and level-headed person Aelin knows, so it’s probably a good thing they’re a team as he’ll balance Aelin out nicely.Parallel stories are another thing that made the plot more interesting and intricate. We have Aelin’s healing arc, Dorian’s magic and Sorscha arc, Aedion and Chaol’s rebellion arc, and finally Manon’s introduction arc.Aedion. AEDION. AEDION. I think I may be just melting into a puddle by just thinking about him. I’m so glad to finally have him back in the story! He’s the sweetest, most brilliant and kindest people ever. And my heart breaks for him every time he thinks he’s not worthy of serving Aelin, or that he would do anything to see her one last time. These two are goals I swear. Aelin and Aedion could do anything together, burn the world down for all I care, and I’d be crying with pride seeing my beautiful, stabby children together. Cause that’s all they want. To be together again. I AM CRYING NOW. *sobs*Manon’s story was WONDERFUL. Because, dear god, I love that witch. She is cold, brutal and gloriously, fiercely wicked. Tell me why I’d ever want anything else. Sarah J Maas could write about how Manon brushed her teeth and I would pay every cent I had to read it. Coming to think of it, it would be interesting to learn how Ironteeth Witches keep their iron teeth from rusting… Magic I suppose. ALSO, I NEED A WYVERN. Preferably one that’s called Abraxos and has spidersilk wings and likes to smell wildflowers. I’d like that very much!This book was very centred on characters, and it built their stories very well! It turned the Throne of Glass series around, and made it what I really love. I can’t wait to get to Queen of Shadows now. All I say is, DO NOT GIVE UP ON THE SERIES BEFORE READING HEIR OF FIRE."She was the heir of ash and fire, and she would bow to no one"

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