Prince and his fairy courtiers are staggeringly beautiful, unrelentingly cruel, and exhausted by the tedium of the centuries―until they meet foster-siblings Josh and Ksenia.
Drawn in by their vivid emotions, undying love for each other, and passion for life, Prince will stop at nothing to possess them.
First seduced and then entrapped by the fairies, Josh and Ksenia learn that the fairies' otherworldly gifts come at a terrible price―and they must risk everything in order to reclaim their freedom.
This title will be released on March 19, 2019.
Add to Goodreads
Buy from Amazon
About the Author: Sarah Porter is a writer, artist, and freelance teacher who lives in Brooklyn with her husband and two cats. She is the author of the Lost Voices Trilogy (Lost Voices, Waking Storms, The Twice Lost) in addition to Vassa in the Night and When I Cast Your Shadow―all for the teen audience. She has an M.F.A. in Creative Writing from City College.
Rating: 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
My Review: First off this is NOT ANYTHING like the Cruel Prince!!
When I started this one I thought I was going to DNF it. It was weird and felt kind of choppy to me. But I held out and I am so glad that I did because this is by far Porter's best book yet!!
If you are looking for an old tale about the Fey then look no further. This one kind of reminded me of Vip Ran Winkle where he was enthralled by the Fey. I have to say that this was nothing like The Cruel Prince and it was something totally new. As the Fey are not the main theme of this title.
This is one dark and messed up title about two kids in foster care. Where one is getting ready to age out the other one is stuck with their foster family for another two years.
I have to say that this title had a great message of hope. That no matter what has happened to you, you can always have hope.
The relationship Josh and Ksenia was both heartbreaking and very messy. Although they are not blood related for Ksenia, Josh is her brother not her lover etc. But Josh doesn't see her that way. He wants them to be together forever. It was a twist that I didn't know what to do with when I read it. It was like at every turn these two chose the wrong thing to stay together.
I have to say that in the end this was so worth the read and I am totally glad that I did read it. It had some very hard parts to get through about roles within relationships and at times it was very very dark. But it had a few great messages about hope and getting out of poison relationships and learning to choose the right thing.
Go Into This One Knowing: LGBT, Dark, Fey, Bad Relationships
“This book is relentlessly dark and horrifying, compelling the reader to seek out the redemption that these characters so desperately need. Ruby is so utterly bound by grief over Dash’s death, she seems unable to avoid becoming his victim. Everett, however, personifies the loving sibling bond that allows the cathartic conclusion of the novel to occur. …This book is recommended for teen fans of supernatural fiction ready for the dark and disturbing material."―VOYA
FTC Guidelines: In accordance with FTC guidelines regarding endorsements and testimonials for bloggers, I would like my readers to know that many of the books I review are provided to me for free by the publisher or author of the book in exchange for an honest review. If am compensated for any reviews on this site I will state that post has been sponsored.
0 comments:
Post a Comment
Hateful and Unrelated Comments Will Be Deleted. Anonymous comments are invalid to enter into giveaways.