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Review: Winter of the Gods by Jordanna Max Brodsky

Winter of the Gods by Jordanna Max Brodsky

Manhattan has many secrets. Some are older than the city itself.

Winter in New York: snow falls, lights twinkle, and a very disgruntled Selene DiSilva prowls the streets looking for prey.

But when a dead body is discovered sprawled atop Wall Street's iconic Charging Bull statue, it's clear the NYPD can't solve the murder without help. The murder isn't just the work of another homicidal cult -- this time, someone's sacrificing the gods themselves.

While raising fundamental questions about the very existence of the gods, Selene must hunt down the perpetrators, tracking a conspiracy that will test the bonds of loyalty and love.

Winter of the Gods, the much anticipated sequel to The Immortals, is the second book in the exciting Olympus Bound trilogy.
Series: Olympus Bound #2
Published by Little Brown on February 14th 2017
Genres: Speculative Fiction, Urban Fantasy
Pages: 496
Format: eARC
Find this book on Goodreads
Buy the Book at: Amazon

I received this book for free from The Publisher in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book nor the content of my review.

This Book contains potentially triggering material. You can find details of potential triggers at the end of this review.

I have to say, I’m really digging this series. Winter of the Gods is an excellent follow-up to The Immortals (reviewed here), the dark middle chapter of Jordanna Max Brodsky’s Olympus Bound trilogy. Brodsky takes the world she built in The Immortals and expands it beyond just the reach of the Olympian gods. Add in a healthy (unhealthy?) dose of relationship drama and another murderous cult, and you have one hell of an entertaining read.

Winter of the Gods begins with another ritualistic murder, and Selene and Theo find themselves called in to investigate, since it bears a lot of similarities to the cult murders they solved in the previous novel. This murder, though, is different; someone is targeting the Athanatoi, the Greek gods in their self-imposed exile. Selene and Theo have to find out who’s behind the murders before they wipe out all of Selene’s fellow gods.

It’s hard to talk about the plot without spoilers, and gasping in surprise was half the fun for me, so I’ll just say that the plot is well constructed, and the mystery unfolds in a very satisfying way. I did find it very interesting that Selene basically loathes Christianity. It makes sense that a goddess would hate the religion that supplanted her own worship, but most of the books I’ve read that set non-Christian mythology in modern day tend to gloss over Christianity’s existence. It was an interesting choice to go straight for it in this book, and I applaud the author for doing it.

Theo and Selene’s romance is still blooming in this book, and… hm. I’m both rooting for them to be happy together and feeling like they’d both be happier if they’d never met. Selene is a hard person to love. She’s bristly and angry and harsh, though she does uncover a softer side of herself in this book. Theo’s cheerful and exuberant, and it feels like a very odd match. But at the same time, I ended up swearing at them both at one point in the novel for not communicating like they should.

The ending left me shaking my fist at my Kindle, but in a very good way. It’s not a cliffhanger, per se, but I really, really want book three to come out like right now.

Content warning: [View post to see spoiler]



This post first appeared on The Discriminating Fangirl, please read the originial post: here

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Review: Winter of the Gods by Jordanna Max Brodsky

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