![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() If I was the King, I’m not sure I’d have bought Tessa or Corrick’s stories. No! Stop! Before you read the blurb, or have a glance at the next novel, don’t do it! You’ll ruin some of the fabulous suspense that’s in this novel. The Royal sector was probably small, because Tessa and Wes could cover it in a night? Or was I misinterpreting how time works there Anyone else feel that way? I never really got a clear picture in my head about how it worked, or how large they were. It seems super weird to me that a city would be set out as sectors, let alone a whole kingdom. The ‘sectors’ in this novel unfortunately just remind me of The Hunger Games. I find it so hard to believe that people are still buying solutions that are useless – but I guess some people need to buy hope (COVID19 quacks anyone?) It seems like the moonflowers were good for the fever – but that was it! So Tessa’s experience as an apothecary was useful in more than one regard. I found the illnesses that weren’t the fever particularly interesting. The poor are dying, and the King and his cruel brother don’t care. The rich, of course, have more moonflower elixir than they need. The Kingdom is threatened by a fever that noone knows the cause of, and only moonflowers can cure it. Tessa Cade makes adrenaline-filled supply runs to dying individuals in the Wilds. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |