Weeping Willow by Sandra Madera

                Part One

As humans we have a need to look for ourselves, and look for our identry and what life means to us. Chloe has always known who she was but has found out that she isn’t quite human and she doesn’t know who she really is. As her and her mother try to settle down, a door magically appears in the house along with a “man” out for Chloe’s blood as she is responsible for the raging war between two races. 

Part Two

Chloe aka Willow, has found out her reason for living and with the help of her mother escapes death to help her twin soul. Getting back the crown and re-uniting the two races will be hard, but with the corrupted King and Queen on both side dealt with Willow, her Mother and Willow’s twin soul can blaze a path of peace for their kingdom.

I give these two short stories 3 out of 5 stars. It was a really good short story but I feel like it wasn’t detailed enough for me to get my head into the world. That’s my favorite thing about books; the worlds that the reader lives in and explores while reading the book. Other than that I loved the book and would read it again and recommend it to people who don’t like to read. I read part one in about an hour of light reading and part two took about the same amount of time. 

 
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Wicked Fate by Tabatha Vargo

She always knew she was different, and could even be dangers to other people. Mage McPherson spent the first 16 years of her life avoiding people, and being an outsider in a small town. As her moods change, so does the weather. But when a boy named Adam coming into her life weirder things start to happen all the time. Flowers blooming, broken things being fixed, and the weather is brighter than it has been. But when her grandfather passes away, Mage’s life becomes a race to save her and Adam. Mage races to find the mother she never meet, to find how to get her “eye” back and avoid the disaster that is sure to come. Little did she know that a little family reunion was going to be deadly for one of them.

                I give this book 4 ½ stars out of 5. Tabatha keeps the reader half in the dark about the secrets of Mage McPherson, keeping the reader on edge the whole time. Even when the reader knows everything there is always something more for the reader to discover about Mage, her grandfather, Adam and even the ghosts that are present throughout the book. Tabatha develops a whole world for the reader, and leaves plenty of that world for the next book, 


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