
Plus, it leaves a strange taste in your mouth. And you get sad, deflated cookies that has lost all the former glory of it’s beautiful dough. Instead of refining the lumpy and misshapen dough by adding in baking powder, she goes on with it like nothing is wrong.

Imagine baking cookies: Duncan has a promising batter in her hands (I mentioned as much in my previous review) filled with gorgeous bits of chocolate but she’s missing some vital ingredients like baking powder.

Let me help you visualise my growing frustration with Ruthless Gods and Emily A. But, the more I forced myself to find engagement with the text, the more it justified my aversion to finishing it it’s just not good! I wanted very, very badly to love Ruthless Gods. Or check out my review! And then come back to read my thoughts! If you haven’t, I suggest you read Wicked Saints before going any further. This review will contain spoilers for Wicked Saints and Ruthless Gods.

Duncan paints a Gothic, icy world where shadows whisper, and no one is who they seem, with a shocking ending that will leave you breathless. In her dramatic follow-up to Wicked Saints, the first book in her Something Dark and Holy trilogy, Emily A. The voices that Serefin hears in the darkness, the ones that Nadya believes are her gods, the ones that Malachiasz is desperate to meet-those voices want a stake in the world, and they refuse to stay quiet any longer. They’re pieces on a board, being orchestrated by someone… or something. Malachiasz is at war with who–and what–he’s become.Īs their group is continually torn apart, the girl, the prince, and the monster find their fates irrevocably intertwined. Serefin is fighting off a voice in his head that doesn’t belong to him.

It is Book 2 of the Something Dark & Holy series.
