Shadowfever (Fever Series Book 5)
Shadowfever (Fever Series Book 5) book cover

Shadowfever (Fever Series Book 5)

Mass Market Paperback – August 30, 2011

Price
$8.99
Publisher
Dell
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0440244417
Dimensions
4.12 x 1.44 x 6.87 inches
Weight
11.6 ounces

Description

About the Author Karen Marie Moning is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of the Fever series, featuring MacKayla Lane, and the award-winning Highlander series. She has a bachelor’s degree in society and law from Purdue University. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Hope strengthens. Fear kills.Someone really smart told me that once.Every time I think I’m getting wiser, more in control of my actions, I go slamming into a situation that makes me excruciatingly aware that all I’ve succeeded in doing is swapping one set of delusions for a more elaborate, attractive set of delusions—that’s me, the Queen of Self-Deception.I hate myself right now. More than I’d ever have thought pos- sible.I squat on the cliff’s edge, screaming, cursing the day I was born, wishing my biological mother had drowned me at birth. Life is too hard, too much to handle. Nobody told me there’d be days like these. How could nobody tell me there’d be days like these? How could they let me grow up like that—happy and pink and stupid?The pain I feel is worse than anything the Sinsar Dubh has ever done to me. At least when the Book is crushing me, I know it’s not my own fault.This moment?Mea culpa. Beginning to end, all the way, I own this one, and there will never be any hiding from that fact.I thought I’d lost everything.How ignorant I was. He warned me. I had so much more to lose!I want to die.It’s the only way to stop the pain.Months ago, on a hellishly long night, in a grotto beneath the Burren, I wanted to die, too, but it wasn’t the same. Mallucé was going to torture me to death, and dying was the only chance I had of denying him that twisted pleasure. My death had been inevitable. I saw little point in drawing it out.I’d been wrong. I’d given up hope and nearly died because of it.I would have died—if not for Jericho Barrons.He’s the one who taught me those words.That simple adage is master of every situation, every choice. Each morning we wake up, we get to choose between hope and fear and apply one of those emotions to everything we do. Do we greet the things that come our way with joy? Or suspicion?Hope strengthens . . .Not once did I permit myself to feel any hope about the person lying facedown in a pool of blood. Not once did I use it to strengthen our bond. I let the onus of our relationship rest on broader shoulders. Fear. Suspicion. Mistrust drove my every action.And now it’s too late to take any of it back.I stop screaming and begin to laugh. I hear the madness in it.I don’t care.My spear sticks up, a cruel javelin, mocking me. I remember stealing it.For a moment, I’m back in the dark, rain-slicked Dublin streets, descending into the sewer systems with Barrons, breaking into Rocky O’Bannion’s private cache of religious artifacts. Barrons is wearing jeans and a black T-shirt. Muscles ripple in his body as he casts aside the sewer lid with the ease of a man tossing a Frisbee in the park.He’s disturbingly sexual, to men and women alike, in a way that sets your teeth on edge. With Barrons, you aren’t sure if you’re going to get fucked or turned inside out and left a new, unrecognizable person, adrift with no moorings, on a sea with no bottom and no rules.I was never immune to him. There were merely degrees of denial.My respite is too brief. The memory vanishes and I am again con- fronted with the reality that threatens to shatter my hold on sanity.Fear kills . . .Literally.I can’t say it. I can’t think it. I can’t begin to absorb it.I hug my knees and rock.Jericho Barrons is dead.He lies on his stomach, motionless. He hasn’t moved or breathed in the small eternity that I’ve been screaming. I can’t sense him in his skin. On all other occasions, I’ve been able to feel him in my vicinity: electric, larger than life, vastness crammed into a tiny container. Genie in a bottle. That’s Barrons: deadly power, stopper corking it. Barely.I rock back and forth.The million-dollar question: What are you, Barrons? His answer, on those rare occasions he gave one, was always the same.The one that will never let you die.I believed him. Damn him.“Well, you screwed up, Barrons. I’m alone and I’m in serious trouble, so get up!”He doesn’t move. There’s too much blood. I reach out with my sidhe-seer senses. I sense nothing on the cliff’s edge but me.I scream.No wonder he told me never to call the number on my cell that he had programmed as IYD—If You’re Dying—unless I really was. After a time I begin to laugh again. He’s not the one who screwed up. I am. Was I played or did I orchestrate this fiasco all by myself?I thought Barrons was invincible.I keep waiting for him to move. Roll over. Sit up. Magically heal. Cut me one of those hard looks and say, Get a grip, Ms. Lane. I’m the Unseelie King. I can’t die.That was one of my biggest fears, whenever I was indulging in any of a thousand about him: that he was the one who’d created the Sinsar Dubh to begin with, dumping all his evil into it, and he wanted it back for some reason but couldn’t trap it himself. At one point or another, I’d considered everything: Fae, half Fae, werewolf, vampire, ancient cursed being from the dawn of time, perhaps the very thing he and Christian had tried to summon on Halloween at Castle Keltar—key part there being immortal, as in unkillable.“Get up, Barrons!” I scream. “Move, damn you!”I’m afraid to touch him. Afraid if I do, his body will be cooling noticeably. I’ll feel the fragility of his flesh, the mortality of Barrons. “Fragility,” “mortality,” and “Barrons” all packed together in the same thought feels about as blasphemous as stalking through the Vatican hammering upside-down crosses on the walls.I squat ten paces from his body.I stay back, because if I get close I’ll have to roll him over and look in his eyes, and what if they’re empty like Alina’s were?Then I’ll know he’s gone, like I knew she was gone, too far beyond my reach to ever hear my voice again, to hear me say, I’m sorry, Alina, I wish I’d called more often; I wish I’d heard the truth beneath our vapid sister talk; I wish I’d come to Dublin and fought beside you, or raged at you, because you were acting from fear, too, Alina, not hope at all, or you would have trusted me to help you. Or maybe just apologize, Barrons, for being too young to have my priorities refined, like you, because I haven’t suffered whatever the hell it is you suffered, and then shove you up against a wall and kiss you until you can’t breathe, do what I wanted to do the first day I saw you there in your bloody damned bookstore. Disturb you like you disturbed me, make you see me, make you want me—pink me!—shatter your self-control, bring you crashing to your knees in front of me, even though I told myself I’d never want a man like you, that you were too old, too carnal, more animal than man, with one foot in the swamp and no desire to come all the way out, when the truth was that I was terrified by what you made me feel. It wasn’t what guys make girls feel, dreams of a future with babies and picket fences, but frantic, hard, raw loss of self, like you can’t live without that man inside you, around you, with you all the time, and it only matters what he thinks of you, the rest of the world can go to hell, and even then I knew you could change me! Who wants to be around someone that can change them? Too much power to let another person have! It was easier to fight you than admit that I had undiscovered places inside me that hungered for things that weren’t accepted in any kind of world I knew, and the worst of it is that you woke me up from my Barbie-girl world and now I’m here and I’m wide awake, you bastard, I couldn’t be more awake, and you left me—I think I’ll scream until he gets up.He was the one who told me not to believe anything was dead until I’d burned it, poked around in its ashes, then waited a day or two to see if anything rose from them.Surely I’m not supposed to burn him.I don’t think there are any circumstances under which I could do that.I’ll squat.I’ll scream.He’ll get up. He hates it when I’m melodramatic.While I wait for him to revive, I listen for sounds of scrabbling at the cliff’s edge. I half-expect Ryodan to drag his broken, bloody body up over the edge. Maybe he’s not really dead, either. After all, we’re in Faery, maybe, or at least within the Silvers—who knows what realm this is? Might the water here have rejuvenating powers? Should I try to get Barrons to it? Maybe we’re in the Dreaming and this terrible thing that has happened is a nightmare, and I’ll wake up on a couch in Barrons Books and Baubles and the illustrious, infuriating owner will raise a brow and give me that look; I’ll say something pithy, and life will be lovely, chock-full of monsters and rain again, just the way I like it.I squat.No scrabbling in the stones and shale.The man with the spear in his back doesn’t move.My heart is full of holes.He gave his life for me. Barrons gave his life for me. My self-serving, arrogant, constant jackass was the constant rock beneath my feet, willing to die so I could live.Why the hell would he do that?How do I live with that?A terrible thought occurs to me, so awful that for a few moments it eclipses my grief: I would never have killed him if Ryodan hadn’t appeared. Did Ryodan set me up? Did he come here to kill Barrons, who was never invincible, merely difficult to kill? Maybe Barrons could be killed only in his animal form, and Ryodan knew he’d have to be in it to protect me. Was this an elaborate ruse that had nothing to do with me? Was Ryodan working with the LM, and they wanted Barrons out of the way so I’d be easier to deal with, and the abduction of my parents was mere sleight of hand? Look over there while we kill the man who threatens us all. Or maybe Barrons had been cursed to live out some hellish sentence and could be slain only by someone he trusted, and he’d trusted me. Beneath all the cold arrogance, the mockery, the constant pushing, had he given over that most private part of himself to me—a confidence I’d never earned, as I couldn’t have proven any more surely than if I’d stabbed him in the back?Oh, gee, wait, I did. On Ryodan’s word alone, I’d turned on him.The accusation of betrayal in the beast’s gaze hadn’t been an illusion. It had been Jericho Barrons in there, staring at me from behind that prehistoric brow, baring his fangs, reproach and hatred blazing in his feral yellow eyes. I’d broken our unspoken pact. He’d been my guardian demon and I’d killed him.Had he despised me for not seeing through the hide of the beast he’d worn to the man within?See me. How many times had he said that to me? See me when you look at me!When it mattered most, I’d been blind. He’d been dogging my every step, treating me with that characteristic Barrons’ combination of aggression and animal possessiveness, and I’d never once recognized him.I’d failed him.He’d come to me in a barbaric, inhuman form, to keep me alive. He’d set himself up as IYD regardless of what it might cost him, knowing he would be turned into a mindless, raging beast capable only of slaughtering everything in his immediate vicinity but for one thing.Me.God, that look!I cover my face with my hands, but the image won’t go away: beast and Barrons, his dark skin and exotic face, its slate hide and primal features. Those ancient eyes that saw so much and asked only to be seen in return burn with scorn: Couldn’t you have trusted me just once? Couldn’t you have hoped for the best, just once? Why did you choose Ryodan over me? I was keeping you alive. I had a plan. Did I ever let you down?“I didn’t know it was you!” I gouge my palms with my nails. They bleed for a brief moment, then heal.But the beast/Barrons in my mind isn’t done torturing me. You should have. I took your sweater. I smelled you and granted you passage. I killed fresh, tender meat for you. I pissed around you. I showed you in this form, as in any other, that you are mine—and I take care of what is mine.Tears blind me. I double over. It hurts so bad I can’t breathe, can’t move. I hunch over, curl in on myself, and rock.

Features & Highlights

  • #1
  • NEW YORK TIMES
  • BESTSELLER“Evil is a completely different creature, Mac. Evil is bad that believes it’s
  • good
  • .”
  • MacKayla Lane was just a child when she and her sister, Alina, were given up for adoption and banished from Ireland forever. Twenty years later, Alina is dead and Mac has returned to the country that expelled them to hunt her sister’s murderer. But after discovering that she descends from a bloodline both gifted and cursed, Mac is plunged into a secret history: an ancient conflict between humans and immortals who have lived concealed among us for thousands of years. What follows is a shocking chain of events with devastating consequences, and now Mac struggles to cope with grief while continuing her mission to acquire and control the
  • Sinsar Dubh
  • —a book of dark, forbidden magic scribed by the mythical Unseelie King, containing the power to create and destroy worlds. In an epic battle between humans and Fae, the hunter becomes the hunted when the
  • Sinsar Dubh
  • turns on Mac and begins mowing a deadly path through those she loves. Who can she turn to? Who can she trust? Who is the woman haunting her dreams? More important, who is Mac herself and what is the destiny she glimpses in the black and crimson designs of an ancient tarot card? From the luxury of the Lord Master’s penthouse to the sordid depths of an Unseelie nightclub, from the erotic bed of her lover to the terrifying bed of the Unseelie King, Mac’s journey will force her to face the truth of her exile, and to make a choice that will either save the world . . . or destroy it.
  • Look for all of Karen Marie Moning’s sensational Fever novels:
  • DARKFEVER
  • BLOODFEVER
  • FAEFEVER
  • DREAMFEVER
  • SHADOWFEVER
  • ICED
  • BURNED
  • FEVERBORN
  • FEVERSONG

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(3.4K)
★★★★
25%
(1.4K)
★★★
15%
(838)
★★
7%
(391)
-7%
(-391)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Not Terrible, Not Disappointed, But ...

I started this series because I kept hearing it was a must read series. And being a fan of sci-fi, urban fantasy, and PNR I figured there would at least be something there to hold my interest. Right off the bat I ran into a problem: I didn't like the heroine MacKayla and wrote a review on the first book saying as much. I read the reviews of the long time fans that assured new readers she does change. Sadly, after finishing this series cannot say that I agree. The basic issues I had with Mac at the beginning of the series were still there for me at the end.

I liked the premise of the series a lot. I really was interested in finding why Mac's sister was killed and why people were trying to kill or kidnap her. The secondary characters were interesting, and I liked the lead male character Barrons. I also liked that the bookstore, Barrons Books & Baubles, was sort of treated like a character all its own. I thought some of the surprise revelations about various characters were used to good effect.

All that being said, I felt the series should have been a trilogy. At roughly 2000 pages for the entire hardback collection it's my opinion that the series was bloated and self-indulgent. Shadowfever clocks in at 594 pages alone. As with other four books in the series, after a while I just needed quicker movement in the storyline. There was a tendency to dwell on one topic, issue, or emotional response for far too long. I found there to be way too much self-reflection and really long-winded internal dialogue passages. While I can appreciate that the author wanted to be precise in conveying MacKayla's state of mind some it was redundant and repetitive. As a sci-fi and urban fantasy reader I'm just used to more tightly written stories where the author gets to the point (no matter how complex) and moves on.

As a conclusion to the series I thought Shadowfever was adequate. It wrapped up most of the questions that were brought up in the series. However, I do feel a more concrete explanation of Barrons and his guys could have been given. As I understand it there will be more books that deal with Christian and Dani stories and couple more Mac & Barrons books. I'll assume those questions will be addressed then.
9 people found this helpful
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Wow! Sizzling!

Wow! What a sizzling finale! Okay, I know it's not the end, but this book was an amazing way to end one problem yet leave it completely open for the next. I don't want to give anything away. I want you to read it yourself. I really don't think you will regret catching the Fever, and this book made sure that I had caught it and caught it hard.

There was so many surprising moments in this book that I couldn't find a place to start with them even I wanted to share little details. You all know how much I hate to include spoilers, but I'm telling you that with each book in this series it gets harder and harder to not share even the smallest details.

The beautiful thing about this book is that we get answers to most of our questions. We know where the Unseelie King is and what happened to the Concubine. We also learn more about V'lane and what happened to Cruce. Mac learns more about herself in this book and the terrifying secrets she holds. It's a must read!
2 people found this helpful
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Excellent End to An Amazing Series

What can I say? I loved it. I loved the one year wait for the final installment in the series, I loved the speculation, the anticipation and I loved each and every book. Shadowfever was satisfying in so many ways. KMM answers the crucial questions for her fans, but leaves the ones that do not need to be answered opened. There are some really good twists and turns - some that I did not see speculated at all about. Great great series.

SPOILERS BELOW (YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED!)

What I love love loved about this book.

I loved that JZB was a predator. This had been alluded to in the previous books where as JZB was very tuned into blood - the loss of blood, people's veins, etc. What he is makes complete sense, but also it was done in such a unique and interesting way.

The twist with V'lane was beautifully done. I loved that he was Cruce. I knew that Cruce would be important in this series and I doubted V'lane's loyalty/intentions but making him Cruce was brilliant.

Mac's powers were very interesting. I loved the description of the silvers and the UK's chambers.

I think the change in Christian is very interesting. Christian has long been my favorite of this series, so I cannot wait to see how this develops. Unfortunately, I am guessing it will be a long time before our next installment.

I loved the scene where the sinsar dubh came into BB&B and tried to convince Mac that her mother was alive. It was brilliant and of course ended with the killing off of a character that drove me crazy.

JZB's child I think really humanized him and helped explain his coldness, abusiveness and ruthfulness. It makes sense why he acted the way he did - he was not only on a mission, but on a mission to save his tortured child. What wouldn't a parent do to accomplish that goal? Perhaps we can forgive some coldness and meanness to Mac? (but the birthday cake scene still remains unexplained ........)

I loved seeing more of Darroc, he was a fascinating character. I never felt sympathetic toward him, but he made for an interesting read.

K'Vruck was a great addition! I loved the scenes with him. And it really helped make Mac's line of thinking that she was the UK believable. And yeah - anything that kills Darroc is well - if not a good thing, applaudable.

KMM's description of Mac's grief in the beginning chapters was so real. I felt her grief and I think she did an amazing job making the readers feel sad. I think I laughed out loud and squealed when I read JZB's chapter from his point of view - it was such a relief after all we (okay Mac) had been through.

Negatives

The Keltars and Adam. I was initially excited to see these characters and their wives/children (although we didn't really see the wives/children). Their inclusion did not push the story forward and was done more as a gift to the fans - and hey, I'll take it. I just wish their interaction could have been more substantive. I thought it was completely unbelievable that Adam would have refused to see the Queen. He spent ½ of Immortal Highlander trying to save the Queen's love, the Queen gave him the love of his life and his current life and additionally, Adam owes so much to the Keltars for it happening - I just don't believe he would resist seeing her.

The little lies and mistruths Mac told both Christian and JZB were irritating. I really wish these hadn't been included.

I completely get why Mac paired up with Darroc, why she pushed her feelings down and moved on - but ugh, I hate fake love triangles premised on misunderstandings. Really? JZB didn't get it? I found that entire part very irritating.

I actually thought JZB and Mac were too lovey dovey. *ducks* I know, I know it is what we all have been waiting for and I am truly happy for the two of them, but I just thought too much time was spent on their bonding and 5 day sex-a-thon. And I could have done without the line, "Mac, I just saw you almost die, now I need to f*** you." LOL. I know the intent was to show some primitive marking by a primitive and ancient beast, but wow - did that make me laugh and was so not sexy in my opinion.

This is more not about the writing and the story but a negative about JZB - I loved him as a character, I think he is fascinating to read about and with but ewwww, the feeding of his son humans, what the hell does JZB eat?!!!, and the murder of a woman he bedded b/c he invited her to his room? I know his does everything for Mac. I know he won't let her die, he dies for her over and over again, he is there for her and supports her - I do think that is great, but I personally can't get past the other stuff. So he will never be a favorite of mine. Fascinating, yes - but not an ideal.

Okay, enough of the negatives, I don't want you to think I didn't like this book. I did. I loved it. I enjoyed almost every page and plan on listening to the audio. I read this book slowly, digested it and took notes. I appreciate everything KMM did for her fans in this book, exploring all of our theories for us, and going out on a limb (Mac thinking she was the UK? - brilliant). I know I will read KMM's next book the minute it hit the stands (or my Kindle), I hope she publishes it soon.

Some favorite quotes:

V'lane: "Accept me or kill me MacKayla. But choose. ****ing choose."

Mac to V'lane: "I nodded back as if I had some clue what we were nodding about."

This line needs no introduction: "****ing Fairies."

Christian to Mac: "Why'd you scream anyway?" He shouted at me...."she startled me is all" I shouted back. "Bloody great. Next time put a sock in it, would you?"
2 people found this helpful
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Feckin' Awesome!

First Thoughts after finishing: "No, I want more of Mac and Barron's story. Please don't let this end!"

I was browsing at the library a few weeks ago, noticed this book and realized that it was time to read it. I have been putting it off because I didn't want the story to end. I wasn't ready to say goodbye to this fantastic fae world that Moning created and these incredible characters that graced Dublin's streets. This was an epic book both in content and page length. I wondered how long it would take me to read. I shouldn't have worried one bit because as soon as I cracked the spine and settled in, the pages flew like lightning. I read this book in two days and couldn't wait to get back to it whenever I had to set it down. For me this is the what Urban Fantasy is all about- one big kick ass book after another. Few writers can take their readers to such great heights each and every book and continue to deliver each and every time. Moning has crafted a high caliber book which never lets the reader down. I loved all of the twists to the story, the surprises that I never saw coming and most of all the development of her characters. I happily lost myself in this world and didn't want to surface for air.

Recommend? Most definitely...but please make sure that you read this series in order. You will miss out on clues and the building of the story and people if you don't start at the beginning!

Dear Karen,
Please continue with this series. I can't stand the thought that I will never get to walk the streets of Dublin with Mac ever again. I need my dose of that crazy, sexy Jericho and I still think you have more to tell us!!!!!!!!!
Sincerely,
Staci
2 people found this helpful
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Such An Amazing Series -- MUST READ!!

Holy crap. This series is awesome and this is one of the best books in the whole series. No wait --- it IS the best in the series. How amazing that the books could just keep getting better!!!! I was sure that Barrons wasn't dead, but of course, in the back of my mind I was thinking, "Yeah, but what if he IS???". The book would have been nothing without Barrons and his wonderful, terrible, awful, heartbreaking secrets. He is one of the most completely satisfying characters I have ever read. But you have to read the whole series to "get" him. You won't like him at the beginning, but you'll be wishing you were Mac, if only to be "his", by the end. I know for sure that I'll re-read this series at some point(s) in the future. I truly loved it. SIX stars.
2 people found this helpful
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A review long past due and why I lost interest in YA romance...

I read this series in my teens while many other girls in my classes were getting STDs and unwanted pregnancies — so I guess my curiosity in these smut novels wasn’t too bad. The action was the main thing that peeked my interest. Moaning created a unique fantasy world with folklore I had never heard of before. That was the positive for me. The downside was the lacking character development and convoluted plot.

Characters first: Mac was such an annoying character/heroine. She began as a very vapid and naive young woman who left her grieving parents on a whim... cause she thought she was more capable than anyone else in hunting down a murderer in a foreign country. Even later in the series, she still seemed so unbelievably foolish despite how much she learned of the Fae world. Then there was Jericho who was suppose to be this tall, dark, mysterious man with the answers she needed. However, we never found out who or what Jericho was and the secrets he carried. The man basically had zero personality. I felt like I wasted time and money just in hopes of being able to see some depth in his character and have something I could grasp to. I never ended up liking him either. Then V’lane was just an egomaniac Hell-bent on wanting sex with Mac since she kept turning him down. Not a single character, especially the main ones, were likable. This series had a lot of potential if the characters had actual personalities to connect with. Don’t even get me started on the plot events. What a whirlwind disaster —- followed by an anti-climatic ending.

How can someone say this is even romance when it seems like Mac and Jer never truly opened up and suddenly they had brief relations later in the series. I can’t say that’s love and that definitely is some twisted idea of romance.. no wonder I’ve stopped reading YA romance. Little to no substance
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5 is enough!

It was the best book, in retrospect, I think I could of skipped bk 3, or 4 and be ok w/ story b/c KMM basically just prolongs the mystery of Mac's importance and Barron's fierce privacy of his past. Towards the end of this bk, I was satisfied w/ Barron's mystery, but Mac's ehh, I think it got a bit too confusing betwn the Unseelie King, Cruce & her role. I still didn't get why the hell did the Unseelie King choose Mac to inherit all the magic of the Sinsar Dub book. At the end, I didn't feel she was really that necessary, just to find the book, that's it. Mac finds out who her mother was, but who's her dad? Again, KMM doesn't explain why Mac was chosen. If she did, I didn't see any explanation of it, even w/ the reread of certain chapters.

But overall, story was entertaing enough, but i think i'll stop w/ this book b/c reading other ppl's comments of the future bks after this, doesn't sound very enticing for me. Just seems MOREEeee prolonging of other stories. I'm not to sold on Dani, I have to agree w/ some other female readers about her age (14) & her valley talk, it does get kind of annoying. I keep picturing a bubblegum girl. Mayb I'll catch up later, but for now, I'd rather read other series, there's too many other good books out there just to stick to one ongoing series. I don't think 10+ bks is the best for certain stories, sometimes it's good to stop at some point, even though some would love certain characters to go on & on. I believe an 8th is coming, happy patience for all who want to go on!
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Shocking twists, and a great finale for Mac!

This is the last book that wraps up MacKayla's storyline and it is the longest of the series yet. But it has a lot of things to wrap up. After the cliffhanger ending of "Dreamfever", I wasn't expected yet another very shocking revelation in the beginning of this book. Yet after that really awesome reveal, I felt like this book started having some pacing issues. MacKayla got to be a little annoying as well in some of her reactions which was unexpected because I have grown to love her character so much. Of course I don't want to reveal any spoilers, but in some ways I'm sure other readers were happy with the developments.

The plot really does take it's time though, as the reader finds out all of the different character's secrets and we learn more about what Mac might be and what happened before she was adopted in Georgia. The world-building is excellent as always, and there are so many different aspects that were revealed that were utterly fascinating. I loved seeing more of the fae world and how different it is to our own. The rules of the fae were interesting, as were the effects of being in that dimension.

There's so much going on in this book, that I'm finding it very difficult to discuss certain aspects without revealing any spoilers. So with just focusing on my feelings as I was reading this - I was at times impatient for the story to move forward, for Mac to get a grip on what was happening, and for other characters to step up to their duty. But, there were a few (like four) absolutely jaw-dropping developments that made me want to jump up and down in outrage/shock, and for that I loved this book. It's a mark of a good story for me when it shocks and surprises like this. It's amazing how absolutely unbelievable some revelations are.

The denouement of the story was excellent as well - the author did a great job of wrapping up every thread and bringing Mac's story to it's rightful conclusion. I was very happy with the book as a whole, although I'm not sure what to do with myself with a Fever series book that has not ended on a nail-biting cliffhanger!
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Five Stars

Excellent author and an amazing book.
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Love the entire Fever Series

This series was probably written for younger readers but I'm a grandmother and I loved the entire series. I have the series as e-books - bought the paperback books to give my granddaughter and she loves them as much as me.
1 people found this helpful