Book Review: Robert Beatty’s Willa of the Wood
When Willa encounters Nathaniel, one of the day-folk, she begins to question what she’s been told for most of her life. Questions that will reveal all too much.
When Willa encounters Nathaniel, one of the day-folk, she begins to question what she’s been told for most of her life. Questions that will reveal all too much.
The violent storms and flooding are the work of evil seeking to undermine Biltmore, and Serafina has been buried alive. She has mere days to save her Pa, her friends, and all the folk and creatures of the Blue Ridge Mountains.
Attacked by vicious wolfhounds, fearful for the safety of her friends at home, Serafina is desperate to find the accomplice sent by the terrifying figure from the forest.
That gawky, acne-covered sixteen-year-old? Lester? Yeah, that’s Apollo being punished, and he must restore Oracles that have gone dark. Without his powers.
No one must know that Serafina exists, when children at the estate start disappearing, only Serafina knows who the culprit is, and she must risk forces with Braeden Vanderbilt.
Now Magnus and his crew must sail to the farthest borders of Jotunheim and Niflheim in pursuit of Asgard’s greatest threat and prevent Ragnarok.
Thor’s hammer has fallen into enemy hands, and if Magnus Chase and his friends can’t retrieve the hammer quickly, the giants will invade and Ragnarok will begin.
The past years of hardship taught Magnus well, and when he learns that impossible secret and his role in saving the world, he steps up to wield the sword…until he dies.
Joy wants nothing more than to live and Hunt in Apex City without a target on her back. But a dangerous new mission assigned by her uncle, the city’s Prefect, may make that impossible.
It’s Apollo’s attitude that gets him into trouble, and Zeus punishes him yet again, tearing away his godhood. Leaving him powerless until he fulfills the trials set before him.