![]() Difficult to say without a third book, but this felt like a stopgap entry that could ultimately be skipped. I mean obviously stuff happened, but it didn’t seem like there was any real progress made (kind of like when a politician is asked a debate question, they’re talking but they’re not actually saying anything). It’s hard to sum-up what happened in this book because it didn’t feel like anything actually happened. But no, relationship development goes as far as, “you like the color red? So do I! We must be soulmates.” Outside of all the bad storytelling, there’s not a lot to say here, other than it’s boring. I was hoping that Kiera Cass had moved beyond the “instant romance” trope of YA. Why care when it doesn’t matter? □♂️ The pacing is atrocious. ![]() ![]() There are no lasting effects or consequences for anything. Hollis went through a traumatic, character defining experience at the end of the first book, but when we get to this one, it’s like it never happened. ![]()
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