

The novella sets the scene for the rest of the series. Will she reach the "safety" of the Academy alone, or will she be attacked along the way.Ī great short novella, that introduces us to Alexandria and her mother, along with providing us with the knowledge that they left the academy under somewhat of a cloud and in a hurry. There's a tragic attack that forces Alex into making the decision that she must make her way back to the Academy. She won't even tell Alexandria why they had to leave the Academy so quickly. everything seems to be going to Rachelle's plan whatever her plan is. They have been left the safety of the academy for three years now. Though in this book we meet Alexandria and her mother Rachelle. It does tie into the book as flowers are mentioned so thats, good too.Īnyhow back to the book, I did enjoy the plot, the Academy setting always seems to work really well.

So now the cover, is a flower that has a kind of smoke of Aether coming off it, I find it attractive and like the colour too. er gorgeous but when JLA describes his eyes oh wow! Talk about a dreamy kind of guy, and he only has a brief appearance in this novella. also Spence Hill Press sent me a paperback copy of Deity! So it spurred me on to buy the previous books to it to enable me to review the series. I purchased this prequel from .uk after Kayleigh - a fellow blogger literally raved about this series. Every step that brings her closer to safety is one more step toward death… because she's being hunted by the very creatures she'd once trained to kill. A horrifying attack forces Alex to flee Miami and try to find her way back to the very place her mother had warned her she should never return-the Covenant. and that she'll never be prepared for that duty.Īccording to her mother, that’s a good thing.īut as every descendant of the gods knows, Fate has a way of rearing her ugly head. At seventeen, she's pretty much accepted that she's a freak by mortal standards. For three years, Alexandria has lived among mortals-pretending to be like them and trying to forget the duty she'd been trained to fulfill as a child of a mortal and a demigod.
