
Book cover E-book Bookmark Novel, book, angle, rectangle png 500x586px 111.15KB.I’ll probably continue on with the series because I have access to it, but I also wouldn’t recommend that someone buy the book for itself.Non-commercial use, DMCA Contact Us Relevant png images I do think that this may have originally been marketed towards younger people, and it showed in this book, which was fine as well. I read this because I pay for Kindle Unlimited, so if you have Kindle Unlimited and would like to try out a reverse harem romance, this is okay for that. I kept having to go back a page or two to remind myself who was talking, and after a while, I just decided to go with it. I would have liked to have seen more of a differentiation in voice between the brothers. Willa felt like a passive presence in the story, even though she’s the main character, and honestly the Abcurse brothers all really kind of ran together. The characters were alright, but definitely it was the world building that really shone in this book. I was interested and engaged in the world, and finding out how it worked and what was going on kept me going. I got a good feeling of what the world looked like and what it consisted of without having to be given pages and pages of exposition to explain it. I thought that the world building was excellent, without a bunch of exposition to explain it. Willa Knight seems to be in a bit of trouble. Another twist of fate lands her a position to serve the Abcurse brothers, five Sols who are almost gods themselves. Until a weird twist of fate lands her in a position to serve at Blesswood, the top Sol academy in the world, a position she should have never had. She’s resigned herself to a life in her village, where she is far removed from such lofty beings. And Willa is not even good enough for that. The only use a dweller has is to serve the Sols, magic-blessed beings who may one day become gods. Willa Knight is a dweller in the world of Minatsol, which means she’s considered no better than dirt.
