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  • Swoon Thursday { 5 } The Fallen Kingdom by Elizabeth May
    Swoon Thursday is a weekly feature hosted by #YABound in which we share something that made us  swoon  in the book we're currently readi...
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    A Darkly Beating Heart by Lindsay Smith Published October 25, 2016 by Roaring Brook Press Standalone Novel e-ARC provided by Netgalley Add ...
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{ about the book }


Exquisite Captive by Heather Demetrios
Dark Caravan Cycle, book 1
Published February 1st 2016 by Balzer + Bray, originally published October 7th 2014 by Balzer + Bray
goodreads
Forced to obey her master.
Compelled to help her enemy.
Determined to free herself.

Nalia is a jinni of tremendous ancient power, the only survivor of a coup that killed nearly everyone she loved. Stuffed into a bottle and sold by a slave trader, she’s now in hiding on the dark caravan, the lucrative jinni slave trade between Arjinna and Earth, where jinn are forced to grant wishes and obey their human masters’ every command. She’d give almost anything to be free of the golden shackles that bind her to Malek, her handsome, cruel master, and his lavish Hollywood lifestyle.

Enter Raif, the enigmatic leader of Arjinna’s revolution and Nalia’s sworn enemy. He promises to free Nalia from her master so that she can return to her ravaged homeland and free her imprisoned brother—all for an unbearably high price. Nalia’s not sure she can trust him, but Raif’s her only hope of escape. With her enemies on the hunt, Earth has become more perilous than ever for Nalia. There’s just one catch: for Raif’s unbinding magic to work, Nalia must gain possession of her bottle…and convince the dangerously persuasive Malek that she truly loves him. Battling a dark past and harboring a terrible secret, Nalia soon realizes her freedom may come at a price too terrible to pay: but how far is she willing to go for it?

Inspired by Arabian Nights, Exquisite Captive brings to life a deliciously seductive world where a wish can be a curse and shadows are sometimes safer than the light.

•*´¨`*•.¸¸.•*´¨`*•


{ my review }

♫ ♫ ♫ ♪

My thoughts for this review are plenty and messy and most of it have to do with the ... odd romance in the book. It was weird. Not entirely in a good way? But, like my thoughts, it was sorta messy and kinda complicated. 

But before I get to that! There were a few things I liked about the novel, first being: the writing. 

Demetrios is clearly skilled at it. I thought the world she painted was incredible, and the fact that it's only mentioned in memories or something similar—aka, we never actually go to Arjinna—makes it all the more amazing. This book takes place mostly in Los Angeles, save for the few chapters from another point of view that take place in other cities around the world. Even so, Demetrios had a way of making you feel like you were in whatever setting the character was in. You could picture the scenery, the people and other oddities that Nalia or another POV character noticed. I loved that! It really created a certain mood for some of the crucial scenes in the book.

The whole world she created for the jinn in this book, I thought, was well thought out. You learned a lot about the different castes and the types of magic they did. Explaining some of them, and whatever history came with it, did feel like info-dumping at some points, thought. Still, I liked this background info!

I also really liked Nalia! I wasn't sure at first because of the very first line for the first chapter—not the prologue. I've only ever read one other urban fantasy jinn book—and lemme tell you, Becoming Jinn did not go well whatsoever—so I was hesitant. I had my apprehensions. But Nalia proved herself time and time again. Demetrios did a wonderful job at making her a complex character—she had to go through so much! From her trauma due to being the only jinn of her caste alive, remembering the tragedy, to her warring feelings for her master and Raif... not to mention she's being hunted. Nalia definitely has a lot on her plate, and her thoughts, her actions, they felt appropriate.

Okay, now for the romance. I know it can seem like there's a love triangle triangle from the synopsis, and at times, even throughout the book. But the reason I don't think so is because I just know Nalia would never love Malek. Not because of Raif being in the picture, but because of who—what—Malek is to her: her master, her capture, her torturer. She's not going through stockholm syndrome. I think—and bear with me here, I'm sort of analysing out loud, so for emphasis, I think—that every time Nalia felt conflicted things for Malek and their intimacy, they weren't feelings for him, but rather the situation she was in, if that makes sense?

You have to understand, Nalia's caste, the Ghan Aisouri, didn't believe in love or anything. Nalia was raised on that. She's never "been with a man" or whatever, so she's never experienced the kinds of things she had to do to convince Malek of her feelings. So I think it's 100% possible for her to have confused her feelings for him with her feelings for the idea of love, of intimacy in general. I hate that she had to go down this road for her freedom, but I admire her strength for enduring it. 

Suffice to say, I don't like Malek at all. But again, I applaud Demeterios for painting him in the light he's in. It makes him more of a complex character than a regular old bad villain.

Okay, now the real romance—the one with Raif. I didn't buy it. Hell, I didn't even get it. This is one of my main complaints for the book—their romance just didn't make sense. It was clear from the get-go he would be the love interest, but in the little time they've known each other, I didn't get how their feelings just ran so deep. The buildup didn't lead to that and, frankly, most of their interactions went along the lines of why they didn't like each other (she's Ghan Aisouri, a caste that thought themselves superior; he's a serf caste), why they could never trust each other, and, uh... not very good banter. [insert shrug emote] I don't know guys. Sure the circumstances they were in... okay they were very complex, but I don't know! I don't buy it. I thought it was too soon for everything they said to each other at the end.

My other complaint is that this book was so damn long. I hate, hate, hate reading long ass paragraphs and this book had a lot of 'em. While most of those painted the picture of Arjinna—which I did appreciate—it also made me sigh audibly multiple times because long paragraphs. No thank you. It felt like it lagged at some points and you could sort of feel the length of the book.

So! I apologise for this long review—look at me complaining about long books then writing long reviews, smh @ me. But, yeah, here are my thoughts. TL;DR: It was an okay start to the series, that could have been shorter, with a less weird romance. Overall: 3.5 stars. 

•*´¨`*•.¸¸.•*´¨`*•


{ buy the book }


amazon | barnes & noble | book depository | indie bound
kindle | nook | kobo | ibooks | google play

note: all the physical copy links are for the paperbacks that match the rest of the series. (thought book depository is weird, but we know how bad they are with covers in general)
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{ about the book }


Starry Eyes by Jenn Bennett
standalone novel
Publishes April 3, 2018 by Simon Pulse
e-ARC received via edelweiss
goodreads
Ever since last year’s homecoming dance, best friends-turned-best enemies Zorie and Lennon have made an art of avoiding each other. It doesn’t hurt that their families are the modern day, Californian version of the Montagues and Capulets.

But when a group camping trip goes south, Zorie and Lennon find themselves stranded in the wilderness. Alone. Together.

What could go wrong?

With no one but each other for company, Zorie and Lennon have no choice but to hash out their issues via witty jabs and insults as they try to make their way to safety. But fighting each other while also fighting off the forces of nature makes getting out of the woods in one piece less and less likely.

And as the two travel deeper into Northern California’s rugged backcountry, secrets and hidden feelings surface. But can Zorie and Lennon’s rekindled connection survive out in the real world? Or was it just a result of the fresh forest air and the magic of the twinkling stars?

•*´¨`*•.¸¸.•*´¨`*•


{ my review }

♫ ♫ ♫ ♫

I think this is easily my favourite Bennett novel. I loved the setting, the romance, the characters, and the whole second chance, hate-to-love sorta thing going on. It was complicated and dramatic and a lot of fun. And it had a great bonus: MAPS.

Yes, I know. This is a contemporary novel. It’s not a road trip book. So maps? Yes maps. I’m not complaining, I love maps.

Anyway, moving on from maps: Starry Eyes was pretty fun. I had a bit of trouble getting through the first part, partially because of a lot of the side characters (I won’t even lie, they were really annoying in numerous ways) but everything else after that more than made up for it. There was a different setting, one I’m not really used to seeing in a contemporary and it made things all the more fun. Zorie and Lennon were making their way out of a wilderness site! While lots of bad things happen! How fun.

The two also deal with all the tension between them. Everything that happened that caused their friendship to falter and fail last year came out and they dealt with it in… interesting ways. I liked it, though, because whew boy, buildup guys. Very nicely done.

One of the reasons I really adore Bennett’s contemporaries is that she has so qualms about writing teenage characters who like having sex. They don’t make it some taboo thing that should be avoided At All Costs. They’re doing whatever the hell they want and it’s completely up to them. So respect.

Another thing! Parents are actually really involved and for a book where most of it takes place with the main characters stranded over at a wilderness site, that seems kinda difficult (and it was) but they’re still there! I especially loved Zorie’s relationship with her stepmother. The two stuck together through thick and thin and I loved them!

Overall, I really enjoyed this one! Bennett always writes sweet and steamy romances, characters who always have intriguing interests (Lennon’s way into reptiles, hiking, and horror manga stuff. Where Zorie’s into space and space stuff, and wearing a lot of plaid). 4 stars!

•*´¨`*•.¸¸.•*´¨`*•


{ buy the book }


amazon | barnes & noble | book depository | indie bound
kindle | nook | kobo | ibooks | google play
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Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly feature hosted by
Jill at Breaking the Spine, which spotlights a
book we're hotly anticipating.

∙∙∙∙∙·♫·*·♪..♪·*·♫·∙∙∙∙∙


This Splintered Silence by Kayla Olson
standalone novel
publishes November 13, 2018 by HarperTeen
goodreads

Lindley Hamilton has been the leader of the space station Lusca since every first-generation crew member on board, including her mother, the commander, were killed by a deadly virus.

Lindley always assumed she’d captain the Lusca one day, but she never thought that day would come so soon. And she never thought it would be like this—struggling to survive every day, learning how to keep the Lusca running, figuring out how to communicate with Earth, making sure they don’t run out of food.

When a member of the surviving second generation dies from symptoms that look just like the deadly virus, though, Lindley feels her world shrinking even smaller. The disease was supposed to be over; the second generation was supposed to be immune. But as more people die, Lindley must face the terrifying reality that either the virus has mutated or something worse is happening: one of their own is a killer.

{ pre-order links }
amazon | barnes and noble | book depository | indie bound
kindle | nook | kobo | google play | ibooks

{ find the author }
twitter | website | instagram | tumblr

I really liked Olson's debut, The Sandcastle Empire! Her writing is so beautiful and I can't wait to get my hands on this book.
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{ about the book }


Ash Princess by Laura Sebastian
Ash Princess Trilogy, book 1
Publishes April 24, 2018 by Delacorte Books for Young Readers
ARC received from publisher (!!!!)
goodreads
Theodosia was six when her country was invaded and her mother, the Queen of Flame and Fury, was murdered before her eyes. Ten years later, Theo has learned to survive under the relentless abuse of the Kaiser and his court as the ridiculed “Ash Princess.” Pretending to be empty-headed and naive when she's not enduring brutal whippings, she pushes down all other thoughts but one: Keep the Kaiser happy and he will keep you safe.

When the Kaiser forces her to execute her last hope of rescue, Theo can't keep her feelings and memories pushed down any longer. She vows revenge, throwing herself into a plot to seduce and murder the Kaiser's warrior son with the help of a group of magically gifted and volatile rebels. But Theo doesn't expect to develop feelings for the Prinz. Or for her rebel allies to challenge her friendship with the one person who's been kind to her throughout the last hopeless decade: her heart's sister, Cress.

Cornered into impossible choices and unable to trust even those who are on her side, Theo will have to decide how far she's willing to go to save her people and how much of herself she's willing to sacrifice to become queen.

•*´¨`*•.¸¸.•*´¨`*•


{ my review }

♫ ♫

Ash Princess was literally nothing new. Nothing, whatsoever. If you read a princess trying to start a rebellion, you’ve read this. Done deal.

And maybe I shouldn’t be that blunt about it, but really. Nothing new happened. Nothing stood out. It was the same rehashed fantasy plot that we’ve all read multiple times: a kingdom under rule of a terrible king; a princess who wants it back; rebel planning. Hoo boy, hold your horses. My heart can’t take all of this.

I just. Ugh. I wanted more. I expected so much better. A princess that’s cunning and dangerous with her mind… not torn between two guys.

Oh, yes. You read that correctly. Love triangle! Joy of all joys. It’s easy to say that the romance is literally the worst part of this book and, coincidentally, the factor that made it just… worse in general lol.

She has feelings for an old, childhood friend. It’s a new, and confusing thing. She has feelings for the prince she’s supposed to seduce—gasp! How dare she!—and eventually kill. Haha. Oh well. I guess we know how well that’s supposed to go.

Overall, I am tired. If you’ve read Ruined by Amy Tintera, you can just skip out on this because it’s basically the same exact thing but with a love triangle.

•*´¨`*•.¸¸.•*´¨`*•


{ buy the book }


amazon | barnes & noble | book depository | indie bound
kindle | nook | kobo | ibooks | google play
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Stacking the Shelves is a weekly feature hosted by Tynga's Reviews
which showcases recent additions to our shelves.

∙∙∙∙∙·♫·*·♪..♪·*·♫·∙∙∙∙∙

So, from March 19th to March 26th, I got...


in the mail


♩ a finished copy of To Kill A Kingdom by Alexandra Christo
♩ an ARC of The Bird and the Blade by Megan Bannen

from netgalley


♩ Star-Touched Stories by Roshani Chokshi

from the author


♩ The Blood Curse by Annette Marie

Anything new with you guys? Have you read or gotten anything fantastic or exciting lately?
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{ about the book }


The Blood Curse by Annette Marie
Spell Weaver, book 3
Publishes March 30, 2018 by Dark Owl Fantasy Inc.
e-ARC received via the author
goodreads
When Clio conned her way into the Underworld to steal magic from the notorious spell weavers of Chrysalis, she thought she was helping protect her homeland.

Instead, she exposed Lyre's most calamitous spell, and now her half-brother Bastian plans to wield it against the powerful Ra family. Clio and Lyre have to stop him before he can unleash it, but Bastian isn't their only adversary.

Chrysalis wants the shadow weave—and they want Lyre dead. And this time, they aren’t trusting mercenaries to get the job done. Lyre's father is coming for him, and no magic can defeat the most lethal weaver in the three realms.

From the scorching deserts of Ra to the darkest corner of the Underworld, Clio and Lyre must chase the shadow weave as both the hunters and the hunted. To make it out alive, they'll need magic more devious and dangerous than either of them alone possesses, and if they fail, the realms will pay the price.

•*´¨`*•.¸¸.•*´¨`*•


{ my review }

♫ ♫ ♫ ♫ ♫

Oh my god. I love this book. It’s easily my favourite book in the series, and maybe even my favourite of all of Marie’s books? IT IS SO GOOD, GUYS. So, so good. Perfect action, romance, and humour—I laughed so much while reading this because so many scenes were absolute gold. 

The Blood Curse does not disappoint and I am over the moon.

I want to begin with Lyre because I adore him. Lyre is hilarious and in this book, he just shines. Most of his scenes with other characters are just literal perfection and I like to think Annette Marie had a lot of fun writing them because I had a lot of just reading them. But not only that, Lyre just has so much more of a presence here, if that makes sense? I felt like a lot of the scenes were from his point of view, and with all those scenes, we just got to know Lyre—all his insecurities and strengths and feelings. It gave a lot more insight not just to him, but also to incubi in general, which I really loved! I love that Annette Marie always delves deeper into castes to make them seem more than what they are!

I loved Clio’s growth throughout the series. In The Blood Curse, she’s growing to be her own support and strength and I will just always root for this girl. She has been through a lot and she hasn’t given up despite the odds. I just have so much love and respect for her and I’m glad we got her story!

And speaking of these two—oh, their relationship is just amazing. Like most everything else in the book, I adore it. Not only theirs, but the other ones throughout the book, too. There are some fun surprises along the way! That’s all I’m saying about that.

I feel like with each new book in the Steel & Stone universe, the world just grows and grows. The Blood Curse is no exception. We see new territories, learn more about old castes, and meet new ones. It’s so exciting—I love learning about different Overworld and Underworld castes!

Another cool part about this book is the weaving. Unlike the original S&S books, magic is seen a bit differently due to Clio’s unique power and Lyre’s history as a master weaver. The intricacies behind their magic—their weaving—is so fascinating and I honestly loved reading more about it.

Whew. I adore this book, guys. Just adore it. You’re in for a ride with this finale and in for a lot of laughs. You’ll swoon and be on the edge of your sweet and you’ll laugh multiple times throughout. The entire Spell Weaver series was fantastic and The Blood Curse is just the perfect finale. Easy 5 stars!


Other books in the series:

The Night Realm | The Shadow Weave

•*´¨`*•.¸¸.•*´¨`*•


{ buy the book }


amazon
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Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly feature hosted by
Jill at Breaking the Spine, which spotlights a
book we're hotly anticipating.

∙∙∙∙∙·♫·*·♪..♪·*·♫·∙∙∙∙∙


Vengeful by V.E. Schwab
Villains, book 2
publishes September 25, 2018 by Tor
goodreads

A super-powered battle of genius, cruelty, and the lengths one will go for vengeance—V. E. Schwab returns with the end to the Villains duology. 

Magneto and Professor X. Superman and Lex Luthor. Victor Vale and Eli Ever.

Sydney once had Serena—beloved sister, betrayed enemy, powerful ally. But now she is alone, except for her thrice-dead dog, Dol, and then there's Victor, who thinks Sydney doesn't know about his most recent act of vengeance.

Victor himself is under the radar these days—being buried and re-animated can strike concern even if one has superhuman powers. But despite his own worries, his anger remains. And Eli Ever still has yet to pay for the evil he has done.

{ pre-order links }
amazon | barnes and noble | book depository | indie bound
kindle | nook | kobo | google play | ibooks

{ find the author }
twitter | website | facebook | instagram | tumblr

Honestly, I am Shocked™ that I didn't feature this book sooner? Who AM I??
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{ about the book }


The Raven King by Nora Sakavic
All For the Game, book 2
Published July 31, 2013
goodreads
The Foxes are a fractured mess, but their latest disaster might be the miracle they've always needed to come together as a team. The one person standing in their way is Andrew, and the only one who can break through his personal barriers is Neil.

Except Andrew doesn't give up anything for free and Neil is terrible at trusting anyone but himself. The two don't have much time to come to terms with their situation before outside forces start tearing them apart. Riko is intent on destroying Neil's fragile new life, and the Foxes have just become collateral damage.

Neil's days are numbered, but he's learning the hard way to go down fighting for what he believes in, and Neil believes in Andrew even if Andrew won't believe in himself.

•*´¨`*•.¸¸.•*´¨`*•


{ my review }

♫ ♫ ♫ ♫

You’re going to have to excuse my language for this review because what the actual fuck happened in this book? 

Okay, look, by the time I’m even writing this review, I’ve finished this messed up series. I’m not going to be reviewing The King’s Men because I felt a lot more for this book—not that I didn’t feel anything for the finale, I did. 

This one just surprised me more than I want to admit. 

Okay, so a few months ago, apparently, I read The Foxhole Court. Long story short, I didn’t care for it and I never expected to continue. 

Then I picked this up. Completely on a whim. A friend on twitter posted a beautiful picture and it showed up on my feed and I just. I picked this up. I read it through the night. And what the fuck. 

I didn’t expect anything that happened here!! NOTHING. It messed me up so badly because hooooooly shit, what the actual hell. I remember next to nothing about The Foxhole Court, so yeah, I completely went into The Raven King blind but jesus, it… I don’t even know how to explain it. SO much happened. I felt like I’d been reading for ages because of all the events when in reality, it was barely just two hours since I began. It was one wild fucking ride from start to finish and it absolutely took my breath away. 

I’m not gonna sugarcoat it. This book is messed up. It’s problematic. It needs a lot of trigger warnings. 

I hate that it’s so addicting. 

Honestly. I kind of hate the fact that this got me so… involved with the series. I really didn’t want to. I didn’t want to like these characters or care about what happened to them, but surprise! I did! I hate everything. 

The most surprising revelation was how much I’d come to like Andrew of all people. The guy is—he’s a lot of things and frankly, I don’t think most of them are good. But I respect the fact that he’s so dangerous and 5 feet tall. Short people don’t get enough credit. ANYWAY THOUGH. I hated him in TFC but I was just ???? throughout this book over him. I didn’t get it. I wouldn’t say I love him because no or that he became a better character because no. It’s so complicated! I definitely hate to... tolerate? lowkey like? him.

I loved the other characters, though. (Not Aaron, fuck that guy lmao.) But Kevin, Dan, Matt, Renee—even Allison! And especially Nicky, who is just so sweet and sensitive and so, so caring it actually sort of broke me. Don’t even get me started on Coach because the lot of them really make me emo—well, except Kevin. I like Kevin because he’s hella funny. The others, though, they’re just so caring (also except Allison, but whatever). 

The backstories for practically all of them are awful. I mean, it makes sense since the whole thing Coach came up with for the Foxes, but wow. This book had more of an insight into Andrew’s and… [deep breaths, Mith, deep breaths] I don’t know what to say. It’s been weeks since I’ve read it. I’m still a bit shell shocked. I’m still horrified. 

Anyway, I think I’ve ranted enough. I don’t know. If you plan on reading this series, take caution. It’s incredibly dark. The first book is meh but I thought this book really picked the trilogy up. It really changed the game—pardon the pun, I think?? It’s messy and horrifying and annoyingly addicting. So yeah. Here’s my two cents.


Other books in the series:

The Foxhole Court | The King's Men

•*´¨`*•.¸¸.•*´¨`*•


{ buy the book }


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Hi guys! It's a wonderful start to a brand new week and even more so because I get to share a new cover today! Behold: Kiss of the Royal by Lindsey Duga!

∙∙∙∙∙·♫·*·♪..♪·*·♫·∙∙∙∙∙

Are you guys ready?

Without further ado...

I present you...

the cover for Kiss of the Royal!


{ about the book }

Kiss of the Royal by Lindsey Duga
Ruthless Song, book 1
Publishes July 3, 2018 from Entangled: Teen
goodreads

In the war against the Forces of Darkness, the Royals are losing. Princess Ivy is determined to end this centuries-long conflict once and for all, so her new battle partner must succeed where the others failed. Prince Zach’s unparalleled skill with a sword, enhanced by Ivy’s magic Kiss, should make them an unstoppable pair—but try convincing Zach of that.

Prince Zach has spent his life preparing for battle, but he would rather be branded a heretic than use his lips as nothing more than a way to transfer magic. A kiss is a symbol of love, and love is the most powerful weapon they have—but try convincing Ivy of that.

With the fate of their world on the line, the battlefield has become a testing ground, and only one of them can be right. Falling for each other wasn’t part of the plan—but try convincing their hearts of that.

{ buy the book }

amazon | ibooks | entangled publishing | barnes & noble | kobo

{ about the author }


Lindsey Duga is a middle grade and young adult writer with a passion for fantasy, science fiction, and basically any genre that takes you away from the real world. She wrote her first novel in college while she was getting her bachelor’s in Mass Communication from Louisiana State University. 

Other than writing and cuddling with her morkie puppy, Delphi, Lindsey loves catching up on the latest superhero TV show and practicing yoga.

Website | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Goodreads | Entangled Publishing
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Stacking the Shelves is a weekly feature hosted by Tynga's Reviews
which showcases recent additions to our shelves.

∙∙∙∙∙·♫·*·♪..♪·*·♫·∙∙∙∙∙

So, from March 12th to March 18th, I got...


in the mail


♩ an ARC of Ace of Shades by Amanda Foody

from netgalley


♩ Bring Me Their Hearts by Sara Wolf
♩ LIFEL1K3 by Jay Kristoff
♩ True Storm by L.E. Sterling

from the publisher


♩ Catching Stars by Cayla Keenan

Anything new with you guys? Have you read or gotten anything fantastic or exciting lately?
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Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly feature hosted by
Jill at Breaking the Spine, which spotlights a
book we're hotly anticipating.

∙∙∙∙∙·♫·*·♪..♪·*·♫·∙∙∙∙∙


The Wicked King by Holly Black
The Folk of the Air, book 2
publishes January 8, 2019 by Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
goodreads

The enchanting and bloodthirsty sequel to the New York Times bestselling novel The Cruel Prince. 

You must be strong enough to strike and strike and strike again without tiring. 

The first lesson is to make yourself strong.

After the jaw-dropping revelation that Oak is the heir to Faerie, Jude must keep her younger brother safe. To do so, she has bound the wicked king, Cardan, to her, and made herself the power behind the throne. Navigating the constantly shifting political alliances of Faerie would be difficult enough if Cardan were easy to control. But he does everything in his power to humiliate and undermine her even as his fascination with her remains undiminished.

When it becomes all too clear that someone close to Jude means to betray her, threatening her own life and the lives of everyone she loves, Jude must uncover the traitor and fight her own complicated feelings for Cardan to maintain control as a mortal in a Faerie world.

{ pre-order links }
currently unavailable!!

{ find the author }
twitter | website | facebook | instagram | pinterest | tumblr

Name one (1) person who is surprised.
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