![]() ![]() But the reviews were ridiculously good, so I bought the book and settled in. So when I found out it was about them, needless to say I wasn’t excited. ![]() Surely not of the Djinn and Grace… two characters who had not been consequential, two I really didn’t care about. But in Rune and Carling’s book I wondered who the next book would be about. We’d get a hint and I loved loved reading the next book to find out. The thing I loved most about this series (and notice I said ‘loved’) is that I never knew who’s book would come next, and I never wanted to find out. She could match him, fit to his presence in the way that Djinn made love to Djinn, share in formless pleasure and arousal. She was like no other human he had met before. Only he starts noticing her, protecting her, caring for her… and realizes she’s something more… So Khalil is staying with the children no matter what. Only Khalil made a vow to take care of the children, and to the Djinn, a vow is something to never be broken, otherwise a Djinn becomes honorless, a pariah. Now in Oracle’s Moon, Khalil is still hanging around and Grace is exasperated. ![]() Khalil, the Djinn, insists on taking care of Grace’s children as Rune and Carling consult with the Oracle. They don’t expect to find a young lady with two young children, Grace. In Serpent’s Kiss, Rune and Carling go to find the Oracle in Louisville. Yes, this is going to be on of those reviews But first a synopsis. ![]() I suppose there’s always going to be that one book that just isn’t as good as the rest in a series. ![]()
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