

I told you about my love of anti-heroes ( here). There are many "bloodlines" of fae with different gifts and characteristics, but I never felt overwhelmed by the various descriptions, instead feeling, much like Harlow, that I was learning slowly about my new world.Īugustine is our male protagonist, and he is already every single thing that I love in my heroes. I'm still working my way through the urban fantasy genre, so I'm no expert by any means, but this is the first fae-focused series I've read and the complex world Ms. House of the Rising Sun has vampires, witches, shifters, and humans, but the focus is firmly on the recently "out-of-the-closet" fae. All signs that a book has pulled me right in. I flew through this sucker, was thinking about it when I was doing other things, and could not wait to get back to it. See her potential, NOLA as a character, great side characters and a world I've not read before. The fate of the city rests on them - and their fae blood that can no longer be denied.Let me start with the bottom line: I thoroughly enjoyed this book, which checked every single box for U/F books-fascinating world, riveting problems, super sexy yetĭamaged hero, annoying heroine who has a wake up call coming but you can

Carefree playboy Augustine, and Harlow, a woman searching for answers about her absent father, are dragged into the war. But when the bloodsuckers return, the fragile peace in New Orleans begins to crumble. For centuries, the fae have protected the city from vampire infestation. But what no vampire knows is that this City of Eternal Night actually exists. Įvery vampire has heard rumor of the mythical place where their kind can daywalk. The fate of the city rests on them - and their fae.

Every vampire has heard rumor of the mythical place where their kind can daywalk.
