“The monster has awakened.
After her escape from the Tower and from her father's experiments, Kat Bloodmayne wakes up to discover the dark power inside of her has grown stronger. Now more than ever she needs to find the doctor who holds the key to healing her, but the only one who can help her find him is Stephen Grey, the very man who betrayed her.
Stephen Grey cannot change the past or what he did to Kat, but he will do everything he can to help her now. But will Kat let him? Or will his transgression be too much to overcome?
Time races against them as they travel with sky pirates through harrowing storms and across the war-torn country of Austrium in search of the doctor who can cure Kat. But can he cure what is broken inside of her? Or will the monster inside of Kat consume her soul?”
Series: Book #2 in the “Soul Chronicles” duology. Review of Book #1 Here!
Spiritual Content- A couple Scriptures read, thought over, remembered, & mentioned (multiple times); Prayers & Thanking God; Thinking about God; 'H's are not capital when referring to God; Kat isn’t sure if God cares about “monsters like her”, but asks for Him to help her, if He’s real; Stephen hasn’t talked to God in two years due to an upsetting event, but recalls the story of the prodigal and turns back to God again; Stephen isn’t sure how Kat’s condition fit into his understanding of the world, or of God, but he knows that God could do anything, including curing Kat; Stephen has a feeling that Kat’s knowledge of God was limited or even non-existent based on her father, but wonders if his aunt shared with her about God; A scientist says that “souls are God’s province” and that only God can bring someone back to life; *Major Spoiler* When unconscious and on the brick of death, Kat hears God talking to her and He also quotes a Scripture; After this and accepting His light, she no longer feels any darkness inside of her *End of Major Spoiler*; Mentions of God; Mentions of the Bible & the story of the prodigal son; Mentions of a doctor writing down bits of Scriptures and posting them around a war camp & that it comforts those who are dying (another doctor says that the words “sound like there is more to death than just the end of existence”); A few mentions of talking to & knowing God; A few mentions of a man not putting much stock into religion, but believing he witnessed a miracle & someone else asking why his “angel” didn’t save anyone else (he thinks God healed him, *Spoiler* but it was actually Kat through her powers *End of Spoiler*); A couple mentions of prayers & praying; A couple mentions of Heaven (in regards to Kat recalling Ms. Stuart telling her that God lived in Heaven and that Heaven in somewhere in the sky); A couple mentions of a family Bible; A mention of God dying and coming back to life; A mention of a man not being religious but finding some of Scriptures shared interesting; A mention of a cathedral; A mention of a doctor doing miracles for soldiers in a war; A mention of someone asking forgiveness for the evil he committed;
*Note: A scientist wants to be able to bring the dead back to life & straying from science to get answers (he wants to unlock the power around death); Mentions of scientists trying to harness the power of life and death; Mentions of a scientist saying that after he learned more about God, he realized that there are powers humans should never temper with because “of the destruction they could cause” and that they were “past the physical and into the spiritual, a place where we could potentially sever our souls”; Mentions of souls & Kat wondering if her soul is dying due to her powers; Mention of a scientist using pagan rituals, “dark arts”, incantations, and symbols on the floor in his experiments; A mention of a couple people who have passed away being said to have “gone to that dark place where science could not reach”(thought by Kat); A mention that if Kat’s father had a god, it would be knowledge; A mention of a scientist saying “we call ourselves enlightened, but we often deny the fact that there is more to us than our physical bodies”; A mention of someone calling Kat’s powers “black magic”.
Sexual Content- Two semi-detailed kisses; Recalling a kiss (barely-above-not-detailed); Touches, Dancing, Warmth, Nearness, & Smelling (including a “revolting” touch by a young man to Kat, border-line barely-above-not-detailed // semi-detailed); Blushes; Noticing (including Kat’s curves while in a thin dress (which leaves little to the imagination and Stephen tries not to look at her), barely-above-not-detailed); Stephen goes to undress an unconscious Kat due to her wet clothing, but only takes off her boots because he doesn’t have a clue on how to take a corset off; Kat unbuttons part of her blouse to tell Stephen that she can’t feel her heart/chest area anymore (they both blush and he looks away, but she is determined to show him and cuts herself to show that she doesn’t feel pain there); Stephen is shirtless (when injured) and pulls up the covers, thinking that Kat has never seen a man without his shirt on (she blushes and looks away); Mentions of kisses & kissing (barely-above-not-detailed); A few mentions of an affair, seeing the couple in bed together, & betrayal (Book #1); A couple mentions of a female friend being assaulted by young men (& also recalling his comment about kissing a smart girl) (Book #1); A couple mentions of jealousy; A mention of a man carefully bandaging an injured young woman (being a gentleman); Love, falling in love, & the emotions;
*Note: Kat’s blouse is torn open for a test, but it’s done by another female and she tried to keep Kat as modest as possible (Stephen keeps his eyes elsewhere); Mentions of a mother who died giving birth & the husband resenting their child because of it (*Spoiler* Kat’s father, who says he never wanted her *End of Spoiler*); A mention of a woman’s neckline being lower than any lady would wear; A mention of women from a dancing hall and their short skirts.
-Kathryn “Kat” Bloodmayne, around age 20
-Stephen Grey
P.O.V. switches between them, Jake (x5), & Dr. Bloodmayne (x1)
256 pages
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Pre Teens-
New Teens-
Early High School Teens-
Older High School Teens-
My personal Rating-
{Ratings are based on content}
That felt very short. Which is a positive, I suppose, meaning it kept my attention as I read it fast, but at the same time, I wish that last chapter had been longer.
After reading the first book in this duology, I really wasn’t a fan of Stephen because of a huge mess-up he did and wasn’t thrilled about the idea of a relationship between him and Kat. I’m still not completely sold on that idea after reading this final book, but I do appreciate that communication happened between the two of them pretty quickly and we were able to somewhat move on from that part.
Another maybe slightly odd thing to note, but something I want to comment on was a…commonality between this duology and the “Skyworld” duology. Both that series and this one has villain-like characters that are serious burn victims, which has obviously altered their appearances, but also their personalities getting worse. Both characters are described in blunt…not gruesome or crude ways, but in a way that implies that’s part of their evil character. Which I might be totally sensitive to this element as I’ve known people that are burn and major burn victims, but after seeing it in both series I’ve read by this author, it didn’t settle well with me. I definitely don’t think the author had any ill-intent, but I would warn readers with burns that the characters with burns in these two series aren’t good-character representation.
You’ll see above in the Spiritual Content section that I gave a lot of details about the faith content that’s in this book. Personally, I’m not sure how I feel about certain elements of the theology found in this story.
I think, though, that this duology just isn’t for me. The human experimenting and Kat’s father being the basic villain father that dislikes his kid because his wife died giving birth. I can see why other readers may enjoy this book with it’s fast-paced and unique plot, but this duology had different elements that made it not for me, personally.
See y’all on Friday with a new review!
*BFCG may (Read the review to see) recommend this book by this author. It does not mean I recommend all the books by this author.
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