![]() I am not sure if there really is a summary/blurb to describe what happens, basically Kiera is on the road with Kellan and his band while they tour. It kind of reminds of tone and feel of Love Unscripted, just light-breezy, not dramatic nor annoying writing, perfect if you are in that kind of mood. In all honesty, I wished I read Reckless first because it has everything I love in a mild tension, but very love-dovey read. I didn’t write a review for book 1, Thoughtless or book 2, Effortless, but I did rate both 3 stars, so suffice it to say, I am not like most reviewers and was not a huge fan. So my review has to deal with my personal taste and doesn’t reflect Stephen’s writing. I love angsty books, epic love stories and just die-for-each-other relationships, BUT the one thing I just can’t stomach is cheating. I wanted to give Reckless 5 stars, I really did, but I think overall I am not sure the Thoughtless series really ever jived with me. ![]() Us against the world? That sounds like wonderful odds. ![]()
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![]() ![]() But the powers of the presidency have their own pitfalls. Unlike her mother or older sister before her, Scarlett has a vision for a more unified Kappa, one where no sister falls to the forces of wicked magic. Scarlett Winter, a legacy Raven, has finally gotten what she’s always wanted: Scarlett is Kappa Rho Nu’s newest president. After destroying an ancient talisman and barely saving their sorority in the process, they’ll go to any lengths to keep their secret as Westerly’s most powerful coven of witches. The ultra-exclusive Kappa Rho Nu-the Ravens-are determined to restore balance to the world. ![]() In this thrilling conclusion to New York Times bestselling authors Kass Morgan and Danielle Paige’s The Ravens duology, loyalty, love, and friendships are tested as sorority sisters Scarlett and Vivi must face the forces of hell itself when a rival sorority threatens to wreak havoc on campus. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Honestly, she did almost all of the work. ![]() Q: What was the process of creating the graphic novel like? Were you surprised by anything in the look of the book?Ī: Savanna just took it and ran with it. It makes historic fiction more approachable. I think that the graphic novel really helps readers-kids and grown-ups-visualize what Key West looked like during the Great Depression. I was one of her biggest fans-she illustrated an incredible graphic novel called Bloom, that I absolutely loved. Q: How did it come to be graphic novel? What do you feel the graphic novel format brings to the story?Ī: Fans of Turtle in Paradise had been begging me for years to make it into a graphic novel! I was so fortunate to have Savanna agree to adapt it. I’d always been interested in that side of my family, so it seemed natural to write a book that takes place in Key West. Which is to say, she and her family emigrated from the Bahamas and settled in Key West in the late 1800s. Q: Please tell us a little about how you came to write Turtle in Paradise?Ī: My great-grandmother, Jennie Lewin, was a Key West “conch”. Store co-founder Judy Blume (left) and Jenni Holm ![]() |