Yesterday I received the third novel in this tetralogy, Tiger’s Voyage (November 2011, 543 [+4] pages, $17.95), with a note from the publisher’s marketing & publicity director, “Please let me know if Flayrah lets you review Tiger’s Voyage. That would be so great!”
It’s not worth a separate review, but it is worth this acknowledgement and an Amazon.com link.
The jacket blurb:
Danger. Heartbreak. Choices. Is forever too long to wait for true love?
Five mythical Chinese dragons and the open sea beckon nineteen-year-old Kelsey who must embark on a third voyage – this time to find the goddess Durga’s Black Pearl Necklace and free her beloved Ren from both the tiger’s curse and his sudden amnesia. Ren’s bad-boy brother, Kishan, however, has other plans, and the two vie for her affection and try to outsmart those intent on foiling their goal.
Tiger’s Voyage, the third book in the Tiger’s Curse series, spins a deliciously suspenseful tale of enchanted creatures, love-torn hearts, and edge-of-your-seat action as Kelsey, Ren, and Kishan journey toward their true destiny.
A good blurb is almost as good as its novel. Also a good opening sentence: “Behind the thick glass of his Mumbai penthouse office once again, Lokesh [the evil sorcerer] tried to control the incredible rage slowly circling through his veins.” Not only weretigers, also dragons now. Those who liked the first two novels will not be disappointed by this third.
Yesterday I received the third novel in this tetralogy, Tiger’s Voyage (November 2011, 543 [+4] pages, $17.95), with a note from the publisher’s marketing & publicity director, “Please let me know if Flayrah lets you review Tiger’s Voyage. That would be so great!”
It’s not worth a separate review, but it is worth this acknowledgement and an Amazon.com link.
The jacket blurb:
A good blurb is almost as good as its novel. Also a good opening sentence: “Behind the thick glass of his Mumbai penthouse office once again, Lokesh [the evil sorcerer] tried to control the incredible rage slowly circling through his veins.” Not only weretigers, also dragons now. Those who liked the first two novels will not be disappointed by this third.
Fred Patten