Updated: December 6, 2024
Published for the first time in 2012, Throne of Glass by Sarah J. Maas was only the beginning of an epic fantasy series that took the young adult literature world by storm. šŖļø Since then, itās gotten even more traction on social media, and itās been on the rise on BookTok and Bookstagram.
If youāve had a chance to check out the reading guide for the ACOTAR series, hereās a similar one for the Throne of Glass series, especially for you! Iām covering the entire series instead of going book by book (I bet you donāt want an hour-long article, haha š¤). Be aware of some spoilers along the way, although I tried my best to keep them to a minimum.
Reading Guide for Throne of Glass
Hereās what I used while reading, but feel free to use what works best for you!
š Tabs/Sticky Notes: Mark places you want to remember in the books so that you can go back and write down details in a notebook later. These were especially helpful during my tandem read of Empire of Storms and Tower of Dawn.
š Notebook: Jot down quick thoughts, whether itās something about a character or the plot.
š Bookly App: Use all the features within the Bookly Appālike the character, thoughts & quotes feature, as they will help you during future rereads of any book, especially if you find yourself forgetting details as soon as you close your book. š¤
Now grab your Bookly App, snack of choice, and letās crack into Throne of Glass! š¤©
Throne of Glass Series Breakdown š
Throne of Glass is a pretty long series, including 7 books and one novella collection. Hereās the list of each book in the series:
- The Assassinās Blade (TOG #0.1-0.5): Novella collection that includes The Assassin and The Pirate Lord, The Assassin and The Healer, The Assassin and The Desert, The Assassin and The Underworld, and The Assassin and The Empire.Ā
- Throne of Glass (TOG #1)
- Crown of Midnight (TOG #2)
- Heir of Fire (TOG #3)
- Queen of Shadows (TOG #4)
- Empire of Storms (TOG #5)Ā
- Tower of Dawn (TOG #6)
- Kingdom of Ash (TOG #7)
Throne of Glass Reading Order Recommendation āØ
- The Assassinās Blade: this collection of novellas provides the reader with an important backstory on certain characters that I believe is important to know before starting the series.
- Throne of Glass
- Crown of Midnight
- Heir of Fire
- Queen of Shadows
- Empire of Storms (EOS) / Tower of Dawn (TOD) tandem read
- Kingdom of Ash
1. Trigger Warnings
Beware of the mentioned SA, and graphic violence throughout the series. š¶
2. List of CharactersĀ
Here is the list of some important characters within the series. š
- Celaena Sardothien: The main character of the series. She is an assassin captured by Adarlan forces and enslaved in the Endovier Salt Mines. Freed by Dorian to compete to be the Kingās Champion, she is a viewpoint character.
- Lysandra: A courtesan who works for a madame in Rifthold, who knows Celaena through Arobynn Hamel. They have a rivalry. She is also a viewpoint character.
- Arobynn Hamel: Rescued Celaena when she was a child and taught her to be an assassin. He is Celaenaās mentor.Ā
- Sam Cortland: Celaenaās friend and lover in The Assassinās Keep.
- Rolfe: Known as the Pirate Lord, he is a pirate who rules Skullās Bay.Ā
- Aelin Ashryver Galathynius: The heir of Terrasen, thought to have died during Adarlanās raid of Terrasen.Ā
- Dorian Havilliard: Crown Prince of Adarlan. He befriends Celaena during her time in the glass castle, and itās also a viewpoint character.Ā
- Chaol Westfall: Captain of the Guard, Dorianās best friend. Also, a viewpoint character.Ā
- King of Adarlan: Dorianās father and the King of Adarlan. He is responsible for the destruction of Terrasen and the conquering of many other countries.
- Nehemia Ytger: Princess of Eyllwe and friend of Celaena during her time in the glass castle. Her family sent her to Adarlan as a ward/emissary.
- Duke Perrington: The Duke of Morath. He is the cousin and close friend of the King of Adarlan.Ā
- Kaltain Rompier: A petty courtier who is Celaenaās main nemesis in Throne of Glass. She is somewhat betrothed to Duke Perrington, but craves Dorianās attention.
- Fleetfoot: Celaenaās canine companion, given to her by Dorian.Ā
- Nesryn Faliq: A city guard of Rifthold, Chaolās friend, and a gifted archer. She is also a viewpoint character.Ā
- Aedion Ashryver: Aelinās cousin who served as a general in Adarlanās military. Also a viewpoint character.
- Ren Allsbrook: A member of rebels fighting against Adarlan and heir of Allsbrookāa territory in Terrasen.
- Rowan Whitethorn: A Fae prince who is one of 6 members of Maeveās cadre. He is also a viewpoint character.
- Maeve: One of three Fae Queenās and Aelinās aunt. Aelinās mother is her niece. She is the oldest sister of Mora and Mab.
- Elide Lochan: Heir of Perranth. Her mother was a close friend of Aelinās mother. Anneith watches over her, and she is a viewpoint character.
- Manon Blackbeak: The Blackbeak Heir, an Ironteeth Witch. Also a viewpoint character.
- Lorcan Salvaterre: A demi-fae member of Maeveās cadre. He is a viewpoint character, too.
- Sartaq: Commander of the rukhin in the Southern Continent. He is one of 6 siblings in the line for the Khaganate.Ā
- Yrene Towers: A young and wise healer who studied at the Torre Cesme and Antica. She is blessed by Silba.Ā
- Evangeline: A young girl who was sold to the same madame Lysandra works for. She is Lysandraās ward.
3. Setting š°
- Erilea: The Continent that includes the following countries/territories: Terrasen, Adarlan, Ellywe, Melisande, Fenharrow, The Western Wastes, The Frozen Wastes, and The Deserted Land.
- Adarlan: Main setting of books 1-4. The country that conquered many others within Erilea.Ā
- Rifthold: The capital city of the Kingdom of Adarlan. The glass castle is located here.Ā
- The Assassins Keep: Arobynnās home and where assassins in his employ live and work out. Located in Rifthold.
- The Glass Castle: The castle in Rifthold where the King of Adarlan rules from. It is connected to the original stone castle.
- Morath: A city within the Kingdom of Adarlan that is surrounded by black mountains. It is ruled by Duke Perrington.
- Salt Mines of Endovier: Where Celaena and many others were enslaved for labor. Many prisoners of war from Eyllwe and Terrasen are here and in another slave camp called Calculla. Endovier borders Terrasen within Adarlan.Ā
- Skullās Bay: A city located within an archipelago of islands off the coast of Fenharrow and Eyllwe.Ā
- Terrasen: Located in the northernmost region of Erilea and ruled by House Galathynius, known for its pine forests and looming mountains. Terrasen was the first country conquered by the King of Adarlan.Ā
- Orynth: The capital of the Kingdom of Terrasen and is in the country’s northern region. Itās bordered by the Staghorn Mountains.
- The Red Desert: Located in The Deserted Land. The Silent Assassins have made their home here, where Celaena spends some time too.Ā
- The Eastern Continent: A continent located to the East of Erilea. It contains Wendlyn, which is ruled by House Ashryver, relatives to Aelin and Aedion, and Doranelle, a Fae Kingdom ruled by Maeve.Ā
- The Southern Continent: A continent located to the South of Erilea, ruled by the Khaganate.Ā
- Antica: The capital city that the Khanganate rule the South Continent from.
- Torre Cesme: An ancient tower in Antica that trains healers in the art of healing. It was built by an ancient queen as a gift to a healer who saved her child.
4. TimelineĀ
While diving deep into the timeline of the Throne of Glass series, I discovered that there seems to be some confusion on the exact timeline. So I have figured out the timeline through Celaenaās age throughout the series. š¤© This is the timeline I was able to come up with:
- The Assassinās Blade/Throne of Glass: Celaena was 17 when she was captured and sent to Endovier. She then turns 18 in Endovier.Ā
- Heir of Fire: Celaena mentions turning 19.Ā
- Kingdom of Ash: Celaena mentions turning 20.Ā
Based on these, we can say that the entire series spans a rough approximation of 2 Ā½ – 4 years.
5. PoliticsĀ
The politics of Erilea are complicated and deeply rooted in mistrust between the countries and territories on the continent. Adarlan started a war a decade prior to the events in Throne of Glass and started conquering the countries around it, from Terrasen, therefore jumpstarting the events in the series. During this time, magic was completely wiped out. Despite losing their abilities, magic wielders were seen as a threat and were hunted down and executed on the King of Adarlanās orders. āļø
6. RacesĀ
- The Little Folk: Small faeries that live amongst the Fae and are known to help those who are worthy.Ā
- Fae: Powerful immortal beings with pointed ears and elongated teeth. They can see, hear, smell, run fast, heal quicker than mortals, and possess some other ability that allows them to shift into some type of animal form.Ā
- Demi-Fae: Half human, half Fae beings. They are looked down upon by some Fae.
- Valg: A race of demons not from the same world that Throne of Glass is set in.Ā
- Witches: Product of the Valg and Fae breeding. There are two bands, known as the Ironteeth and the Crochanās.
- Humans: Mortals who can sometimes have magical abilities.
7. Mythology/Folklore šŖ
Throughout Throne of Glass, there are several mentions of allusions to multiple pantheons of gods/goddesses. Sarah J. Maas is known for drawing from different mythologies, such as Roman, Eastern European, Greek, Norse, and Celtic. Here are some mentioned in the TOG series:
- Hellas: A dark god and a god of death. Possibly inspired by Hel in Norse Mythology or Hades in Greek Mythology. He watches over Lorcan Salvaterre.Ā
- Deanna: Goddess of hunting and the moon. Inspired by Diana in Roman Mythology.Ā
- Silba: Goddess of healing, healers, and gentle death.Ā
- Mala Fire-Bringer: Goddess of the Sun.Ā
- Anneith: The Lady of Wise Things, she watches over Elide Lochan, who is Hellas’s consort.
- God of Truth: Also known as the Sin-Eater.
- Three-Faced Goddess: This goddess, also known as the Triple Goddess, appears in many Neopagan religions. The Ironteeth Witches worship her. She has three heads/faces representing different Ironteeth Clans.
- Baast: A warrior goddess inspired by Bast from Egyptian Mythology. She is represented by the Cats of Baast that roam the library in The Torre Cesme.Ā
- 36 Gods: The Southern continent has 36 gods/goddesses. Citizens can worship who they like, explaining why there are so many deitiesāBaast is one of the 36.Ā
8. Magic āØ
Here is a list of different types of magic mentioned throughout Throne of Glass series:
- Elemental Magic: The ability to control fire, ice, wind, earth, and water. Not necessarily the ability to control all.Ā
- Shape Shifting: The ability to shift into different people/animals.
- Dark Magic: From the Valg. Lorcanās magic is also mentioned to be of this nature.Ā
- Teleportation: The ability to move from one location to another.Ā
- Wyrdmarks: Ancient language used to perform different spells.Ā
- Raw Magic: The ability to use any type of magic.
9. Bookly infographics
The Assassinās Blade (TOG #0.1-0.5)
Throne of Glass (TOG #1)
Crown of Midnight (TOG #2)
Heir of Fire (TOG #3)
Queen of Shadows (TOG #4)
Empire of Storms (TOG #5)
Tower of Dawn (TOG #6)
Kingdom of Ash (TOG #7)
Empire of Storms / Tower of Dawn tandem reading guide
While initially daunting, I 100% recommend tandem reading EOS and TOD. They occur simultaneously, and since Sarah J. Maas switches characters’ perspectives quite often in her books, it feels like just additional character chapters. So below you have an EOS/TOD tandem reading list to guide you in your schedule. š
- EOS: Nightfall-Chapter 5
- TOD: Chapter 1
- EOS: Chapter 6-8
- TOD: Chapter 2-3
- EOS: Chapter 9-10
- TOD: Chapter 4-6
- EOS: Chapter 11
- TOD: Chapter 7
- EOS: Chapter 12-13
- TOD: Chapter 9-10
- EOS: Chapter 14-16
- TOD: Chapter 11-12
- EOS: Chapter 17-18
- TOD: Chapter 13-16
- EOS: Chapter 19
- TOD: Chapter 17
- EOS: Chapter 20-23
- TOD: Chapter 18-21
- EOS: Chapter 24-25
- TOD: Chapter 22-23
- EOS: Chapter 26
- TOD: Chapter 24
- EOS: Chapter 27-29
- TOD: Chapter 25-28
- EOS: Chapter 30
- TOD: Chapter 29-31
- EOS: Chapter 31
- TOD: Chapter 32
- EOS: Chapter 32
- TOD: Chapter 33-35
- EOS: Chapter 33-51
- TOD: Chapter 36-37
- EOS: Chapter 52
- TOD: Chapter 38-40
- EOS: Chapter 53
- TOD: Chapter 41-42
- EOS: Chapter 54-56
- TOD: Chapter 43
- EOS: Chapter 57-59
- TOD: Chapter 44-48
- EOS: Chapter 60-61
- TOD: Chapter 49-51
- EOS: Chapter 62-63
- TOD: Chapter 52-53
- EOS: Chapter 64-65
- TOD: Chapter 54-56
- EOS: Chapter 66-67
- TOD: Chapter 57
- EOS: Chapter 68-75
- TOD: Chapter 58-Fireheart
And there you have it folks! My reading guide for Throne of Glass. I added everything I thought was notable about the series, so I hope you enjoy reading it and love it as much as I did. š¤©. Happy reading!
This reading guide was written by our Bookly Pro Reader, The Rose Post š
Looking for some more reading guides to up your series game?
If you want some more tips & tricks on how to read other series, check out our guides for the ACOTAR series and The Poppy War Trilogy. Donāt forget to take notes while reading so that you wonāt miss out on any timeline detail, character, or setting you encounter throughout the story. š
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