Love or life.
Henry or their child.
The end of her family or the end of the world.
Kate must choose.
During nine months of captivity, Kate Winters has survived a jealous goddess, a vengeful Titan and a pregnancy she never asked for. Now the Queen of the Gods wants her unborn child, and Kate can't stop her--until Cronus offers a deal.
In exchange for her loyalty and devotion, the King of the Titans will spare humanity and let Kate keep her child. Yet even if Kate agrees, he'll destroy Henry, her mother and the rest of the council. And if she refuses, Cronus will tear the world apart until every last god and mortal is dead.
With the fate of everyone she loves resting on her shoulders, Kate must do the impossible: find a way to defeat the most powerful being in existence, even if it costs her everything.
Even if it costs her eternity.
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First line:
Format:
Rating:
I wasn't sure how I would feel about this book. Goddess Interrupted left me disliking Kate. And I still dislike Kate. It seems like she always complaining, never doing anything. She fears going against her family's wishes even if she knows she would be doing the right thing. She also never pulled through with anything. She would threaten to do something and never actually do it even if her demands weren't met. She doesn't have any backbone.
There were three reasons I started reading and actually finished this book: Henry, his and Kate's child, and Ava. Henry is so loving, supportive, protective, and troubled. I've enjoyed him from the start. The end of Goddess Interrupted just about killed me, hearing that Kate was pregnant. I had to pick up The Goddess Inhereitance just to see what happened. Ava has been put into a difficult situation. Especially by her father, Walter. She must betray Kate not only to protect her husband from Calliope but because Walter has demanded she pretend to help Calliope to gain information. But part of pretending means Kate thinks she actually betrays her. I wish I could read Ava's POV.
The Goddess Inheritance was good but not very memorable.
Henry or their child.
The end of her family or the end of the world.
Kate must choose.
During nine months of captivity, Kate Winters has survived a jealous goddess, a vengeful Titan and a pregnancy she never asked for. Now the Queen of the Gods wants her unborn child, and Kate can't stop her--until Cronus offers a deal.
In exchange for her loyalty and devotion, the King of the Titans will spare humanity and let Kate keep her child. Yet even if Kate agrees, he'll destroy Henry, her mother and the rest of the council. And if she refuses, Cronus will tear the world apart until every last god and mortal is dead.
With the fate of everyone she loves resting on her shoulders, Kate must do the impossible: find a way to defeat the most powerful being in existence, even if it costs her everything.
Even if it costs her eternity.
----------
First line:
Throughout his eternal life, Walter had witnessed countless summers, nut never any as endless as this.----------
Format:
Nook ebook----------
Rating:
3 out of 5 stars----------
I wasn't sure how I would feel about this book. Goddess Interrupted left me disliking Kate. And I still dislike Kate. It seems like she always complaining, never doing anything. She fears going against her family's wishes even if she knows she would be doing the right thing. She also never pulled through with anything. She would threaten to do something and never actually do it even if her demands weren't met. She doesn't have any backbone.
There were three reasons I started reading and actually finished this book: Henry, his and Kate's child, and Ava. Henry is so loving, supportive, protective, and troubled. I've enjoyed him from the start. The end of Goddess Interrupted just about killed me, hearing that Kate was pregnant. I had to pick up The Goddess Inhereitance just to see what happened. Ava has been put into a difficult situation. Especially by her father, Walter. She must betray Kate not only to protect her husband from Calliope but because Walter has demanded she pretend to help Calliope to gain information. But part of pretending means Kate thinks she actually betrays her. I wish I could read Ava's POV.
The Goddess Inheritance was good but not very memorable.
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