![]() He needs a vampire queen and they won’t let him pick Victoria without considering other girls first. Both of these plots need to be dealt with, but there are also lingering issues from Aden becoming the vampire king. Aden kills the fairy who tries to kill him and then must hide his deed. The beginning of Unraveled introduces the fairies, who loathe the vampires. The end of Intertwined introduced the witches, who placed a death curse on Aden, Mary Ann, Victoria, and Riley. ![]() Poor Caleb gets close to the limelight, but doesn’t get any answers because the other characters don’t have time to figure out anything about his past other than the fact he’s connected to the witches harassing them. But Aden’s three remaining voices are mostly shoved to the side in Unraveled. As Intertwined focused on one of the voices, I expected subsequent novels would do the same. When I reviewed Intertwined, I noted that it had a huge cast of characters and that many of them were underdeveloped – especially those of the voices in Aden Stone’s head. ![]() There were parts of it that I enjoyed, but the book felt like it was standing still. But even an author you really like can write a novel that doesn’t quite work for you. Young adult urban fantasy released by Harlequin Teen ![]() Liviania’s review of Unraveled (Intertwined, Book 2) by Gena Showalter ![]()
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