![]() ![]() ![]() For me personally though, this wasn’t a huge problem since I felt like Kit needed a break after the constant barrage of problems she’s been faced with. It isn’t until close to the end that the tension present from books 1-5 returned. Result: most of the challenges they faced in the book didn’t feel like challenges, since I was confident they’d triumph all along. ![]() Her guys are the strongest and best of their species too. ![]() By this point Kit is the strongest and best ever. Weirdly, despite being the last book in the series, it felt like there wasn’t a whole lot of tension. It was easy to keep hold of that and ignore the stuff I didn’t remember. And really, the main storyline is just Defeat Bride. It took me a while to get into the swing of things, since it’s been a while since I read The Crow’s Murderand there are an awful lot of names being thrown around, but I just went with the flow and most of it came back to me at about the 20% mark. From there the struggle against Bride, (Kit’s evil mother) proceeds apace. We start off with Kit and River, having given themselves over to the darkness, doing a whole bunch of killing before the other guys can come and break them out of it. This was, to be exact, a 3.75 star rating, but I’ve rounded it up to 4 not just because of the laws of mathematics but because this book deserves it, for how much I’ve enjoyed the Kit Davenport series over the last year. ![]()
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