![]() ![]() This irritated me and I was so glad that McGarry had Violet voice these concerns throughout the book. ![]() While the club claims to want to help Violet, they shut her out of every decision and force her to take things into her own hands. As I mentioned earlier, the rules, especially those surrounding the women, of the Terror were beginning to rub me the wrong way. Going on the premise that this is the final book in the series, I think McGarry did a really good job wrapping everything up and addressing many of the issues I had. His father was part of the Terror but he died when Chevy was a baby, leaving him with so many questions and feeling stuck between the world of the Terror and that of normalcy. ![]() Chevy is about as close as you can get to being Terror, his grandfather Cyrus is the president and his uncle Eli is a core member. She has little faith in the Terror's ability to protect her family and has tried to cut them out of her life, going so far as to dump her Terror boyfriend, Chevy. ![]() Violet is the daughter of a Terror member who died a few years ago. This story, which I can only assume is the last in the series (mainly because there is a major conflict resolution that would make book four hard, but also because Goodreads doesn't have a fourth book listed), follows Violet and Chevy. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |