Our Dark Duet
β Scribed by Schwab, Victoria
- Publisher
- HarperCollinsPublishers
- Year
- 2017
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 341 KB
- Series
- Monsters of Verity 2
- Category
- Fiction
- City
- S.I.
- ISBN
- 0062380885
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The sequel?and conclusion?to Victoria Schwab's instant #1 New York Times bestseller, This Savage Song. Kate Harker is a girl who isn't afraid of the dark. She's a girl who hunts monsters. And she's good at it. August Flynn is a monster who can never be human. No matter how much he once yearned for it. He has a part to play. And he will play it, no matter the cost. Nearly six months after Kate and August were first thrown together, the war between the monsters and the humans is a terrifying reality. In Verity, August has become the leader he never wished to be, and in Prosperity, Kate has become the ruthless hunter she knew she could be. When a new monster emerges from the shadows?one who feeds on chaos and brings out its victim's inner demons?it lures Kate home, where she finds more than she bargained for. She'll face a monster she thought she killed, a boy she thought she knew, and a demon all her own. A gorgeously written dark fantasy from New York Times-bestselling author Victoria Schwab, and one to hand to fans of Holly Black, Laini Taylor, and Maggie Stiefvater.
β¦ Subjects
Young Adult Fiction
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
From the author of _The Missing Girl_ , Jenny Quintana's gripping novel, _Our Dark Secret_ , tells the story of two girls, two deaths and two decades of silence . . . The crazy girls, they called them - or at least, Elizabeth liked to think they did. As a teenager in the late 1970s, she was clever
From the author of The Missing Girl, Jenny Quintanaβs gripping novel, Our Dark Secret, tells the story of two girls, two deaths and two decades of silence . . . The crazy girls, they called them β or at least, Elizabeth liked to think they did. As a teenager in the late 1970s, she was clever, over
We tell stories to hold on to what has been loved and lost. To sustain memory. To create new myths. . .
*Why do we tell stories? To hold on to what has been loved and lost, to create new myths, to explain and teach in ways that seep into memory.* Shakiso Collard leads the evacuation from Benghazi as *jihadis* overwhelm the refugee camp where she works. On arrival in Paris, she is betrayed by her bos