![]() ![]() John is smoking hot and utterly (some might say “obsessively”) in love with Pierce, but there's an obstacle to their relationship: Pierce doesn't want to abandon her family and live in his underground castle forever, even when her life in the real world grows increasingly dangerous. During her brief sojourn in the afterlife, Pierce met John, the death deity in charge of riding herd on the recently deceased. ![]() ![]() This particular heroine is Pierce Olivera, a teenage girl who survived a near-death-experience after nearly drowning in her family's pool. Happily, Awaken hits stores on Tuesday, and by now Cabot's many fans should know what to expect: lots of snappy dialogue, a broody, bossy, quietly devoted love interest, and a heroine discovering the power of taking names and kicking butt. I read it as the minute we received it (because Cabot's books are always fun), but if I had any self-control I would have followed my own advice and waited until the final book in the trilogy was released. I've been waiting a whole year to review Meg Cabot's novel Underworld, the middle book in her Abandon trilogy. ![]()
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