


I also like the characters, especially Anne. It still added some things to the image I see as I read this book. Though I know to myself that there were times that I get bored because of few dialogues and more descriptive parts in some chapters, but it was okay. The authors writing is also simple but with a poetic tone that makes the story more enjoyable to read. I already have some idea of who could be the person behind the creature, but I am just not sure how to prove it. I absolutely like this novel even though some of the scenes are predictable. She will know things she couldn’t believe was real, and she will also discover something impressive yet scary fact about herself. As more days passed by, the dark truth that lies behind the place shows slowly. She already noticed the mysterious aura that surrounds the place once she arrived there. The story just goes around Anne, who was sent to another manor and a new master. The Rose Master is a great story, with lots of paces, mysterious yet familiar twists and turns, and rich in impressive magical powers.

Now, Anne must either risk her life for the young man she’s grown to admire or abandon her post while she still can. The creature is very real, and she’s the only one who can help him stop it.

But as she forces the truth about what haunts the grounds from Lord Grey, she learns secrets she isn’t prepared for. When a fire leaves Anne trapped in the manor with its Master, she finally demands to know why. A creature that seems intent on harming her. Her questions are met with hushed whispers, and she soon finds herself alone in the empty halls, left to tidy and clean rooms no one visits.Īs the feeling of being watched grows, she begins to realize there is something else in the house with them–some creature that stalks the frozen halls and claws at her door. Staffed with only three other servants, all gripped by icy silence and inexplicable bruises, and inhabited by a young master who is as cold as the place itself, the house is shrouded in neglect and thick with fear. There’s something wrong with Rosewood Manor. And when she sees the run-down, isolated house, she instantly knows why: She’s being dismissed from the home she’s served at since she was a child, and shipped off to become the newly hired parlor maid for a place she’s never heard of. But that’s hardly the most upsetting news. The day Anne Tinning turns seventeen, birds fall from the sky.
