

Now that you've all officially been warned, let's do this long-ass update! Join me and several other authors and artists as we do a read along of Holly Black's Folk of the Air series hereon Facebook.I'm making progress on Famine (The Four Horsemen #3) and two other secret projects.(They won't be mailed out until March 2020.) You can buy signed copies of my books here at the Apoll圜on bookstore.The audiobook for War (The Four Horsemen #2) is now available here on Amazon, here on Audible, and here on Apple Books.How can the author make you root for a soulless immortal? Don’t get me wrong, it takes a LONG time for the reader to transition from “YAS GURL YOU SHOOT HIM FULL OF ARROWS” to “Aaayou get to the teaser for book 3. The reason I love this series so much is because the love story seems so impossible. She preaches mercy and compassion, but less in a Mother Teresa way and more in a “I will drag you kicking and screaming towards decency if it’s the last thing I do” way. She uses whatever tools she can weapons, words, sex, or War’s feelings for her.


She is War’s match, and she never stops fighting for what is right. There’s enemies to lovers, and then there’s enemies while lovers.īut Miriam does just fine. It’s a tricky business, when your lady parts are a big fan but your brain is telling you to gut him with his own sword. She hates him for the death and destruction he’s inflicting, but dayum if he ain’t pretty, you know? And then there are those fleeting, fascinating glimpses of what could be human emotions underneath all the bloody-mindedness. As Miriam spends more time in War’s camp, she finds herself reluctantly intrigued by the Horseman.

Apparently War is convinced she’s his God-given bride, so…that’s not creepy. A self-taught weapon maker eking out a tenuous existence in Jerusalem, she tries to kill War (but fails horsemen have a tendency to not stay dead) and is taken captive.
