![]() ![]() Now everything else that leads up to the ending I have issues with, which is why I gave this book a three – the ending cannot really make up for the whole book, in its entity. But just like when most books end, I still want to know what happens next. Before the White Rabbit Chronicles, before Firstlife, New York Times bestselling author Gena Showalter wrote the Intertwined series, featuring a sixteen-year-old boy with four other souls trapped in his headAden Stone has always been different. ![]() ![]() But now they're causing him all kinds of trouble. With no other family and a life spent in and out of institutions, Aden and the souls have become friends. I have a love/hate relationship with this – I wan risks and authors who take those risks. Aden Stone has four human souls living inside him: One can time-travel. Now do not get me wrong we get to live the series all over again but when it is a good book, it is a good book no matter how many alternate universes play out. Now why I am happy this is not the last book is because I want to know what he changes and how he copes. I understand his need to correct everything that went wrong but being stuck with the memories would be horrible to bare. It was way unexpected and yet I feel that is what I love about it. I could totally love this book series, for just this ending a lone. In the second installment of Showalters Intertwined series, Aden and Mary Ann continue their breathless adventures in a world where, as Aden puts it, all myths. ![]()
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