Book Review: Jeaniene Frost’s The Beautiful Ashes
I was so excited to discover a new Jeaniene Frost series! Until I read it. Talk about teenage-bland. Sorry, teens, no offense.
I was so excited to discover a new Jeaniene Frost series! Until I read it. Talk about teenage-bland. Sorry, teens, no offense.
With snappy banter, cotillion dresses, non-stop action, and a touch of magic, Harper Jane Price is the Rebel Belle until a strange run-in imbues her with incredible abilities.
In the aftermath of an event that ripped their world apart, Sydney and Adrian struggle to pick up the pieces and find their way back to each other. If they can survive.
Half demon, half gargoyle, the seventeen-year-old Layla just wants to be normal, but she has abilities no one else possesses. With a kiss that kills anything with a soul, she’s anything but normal.
Princess Snow is missing; Essie is used to being cold. When the duplicitous Dane crash-lands, Essie gets pulled back into war and must choose who to trust.
A whole new – funny – look at how the universe is created with gods as human as you and I. It’s god vs. god, guile vs. goodness, where only one of them plays by the rules.
The escape of Spirit White and her friends Burke, Loch, and Addie has come at a terrible cost–a dear friend sacrificed her own life to save theirs. Now they’ll have to deal with the terrifying truth.
Although Kaylin has back in one piece from the West March, she’s fraying under life in the Imperial Palace, a dragon roommate, and now Castle Nightshade’s latent magic is waking.
Faery intrigue, mortal love, and the clash of ancient rules and modern expectations swirl together in Melissa Marr’s stunning twenty-first-century faery tale.
It’s the tattoo that pulls Leslie in to the dangerous world of the fae even as the balance between Light and Dark is in flux. Irial, ruler of the Dark Court, is struggling to hold his people together