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A review by witchylevy
Voidborne by KrazeKode
5.0
Cute, moral, and a hopeful fatalism
Reading this book brought me back to when I read the first He Who Fights With Monsters book. The initial idealism or moral struggles had a parallel beginning. For his age, Noah acts pretty immature, and yet it works. I am concerned how free he is with his blood, and as soon as he shared that I knew it was not going to end well. There's a lot of things happening beyond Noah's current compression, and I like that Noah has so far proven the annoying helper in his I guess soul space wrong.
Reading this book brought me back to when I read the first He Who Fights With Monsters book. The initial idealism or moral struggles had a parallel beginning. For his age, Noah acts pretty immature, and yet it works. I am concerned how free he is with his blood, and as soon as he shared that I knew it was not going to end well. There's a lot of things happening beyond Noah's current compression, and I like that Noah has so far proven the annoying helper in his I guess soul space wrong.