Book Review: Keri Arthur’s Sorrow’s Song
They say breaking up is hard to do. They’re wrong. Living with the consequences is so much harder, especially when sorrow is a powerful draw to evil in Lizzie’s grief-filled life.
They say breaking up is hard to do. They’re wrong. Living with the consequences is so much harder, especially when sorrow is a powerful draw to evil in Lizzie’s grief-filled life.
Lizzie Grace had hoped that Clayton’s death would bring some normality back into her life. But her father remains intent on interfering now that he knows she can manipulate wild magic, the High Witch Council has sent in an investigator to uncover her part in Clayton’s murder, and an even bigger threat has arrived on the reservation.
Lizzie Grace throws herself into the investigation of a murdered newlywed to distract herself from the husband she fled thirteen years ago. A past that’s caught up to Lizzie and Belle. And he’s out for revenge…
It’s the scent of evil that draws Lizzie Grace to the pile of clean-picked bones, one with a White Lady demanding Belle’s help. Worse is the witchy bloodhound sent by Lizzie’s husband.
It won’t be a quiet Christmas when werewolves start turning up dead — skinned. Then a witch turns up dead with a dark circle of power that can’t be broken.
The reservation doesn’t allow magic, and yet it’s filled with wild magic, attracting evil that eats souls and animates the dead flesh. And Lizzie Grace and Belle Kent face eviction.
When Lizzie Grace is asked to find a missing woman, she’s well aware death awaits. What she doesn’t expect to find is a very human pile of skin next the woman’s body.