As the signs of the apocalypse begin, the Templars race against the clock to get the Daughters of Eve back to the Garden of Eden. Rhett and Evelyn, battling through the effects of the tribulation, face off against a cabal of power hungry, immortality seeking men bent on their own agenda.
Born and raised in Corona California, Danielle now resides in Texas with her husband and two sons. She has been writing for as long as she can remember, penning works in a number of genres. To date, she has published 49 novels and nine short stories. Her interests vary wildly: reading, traveling, photography, graphic art and baking, among others.
This books picks up immediately from where the first book left off. If you are looking for hot steamy sex from Evelyn and Rhett the main couple in this series you won't get much of it in this book. Their love however will grow and mature along the way until there is no doubt as to what they will sacrifice to be together. This book is so much better than the first book in the series because it is more centered around the overall plot than the romance. This book is primarily an paranormal adventure story and secondarily a romance story.
Rhett Sagan, his father Drugar, and his brother Dracht have been assigned by the Knights of Templar's high priest to guard and protect Evelyn and her two surviving sisters Alexandra and Minna. The group quickly discovers that there is not just one group set out to destroy the Daughters of Eve. These new enemies are important powerful men that are using every technological product known to man to trace, track and trap the sisters. Each Knight is assign to a daughter to protect them with their lives. The sisters must separate to better their chances of survival until they can meet up at the designated place in the Garden of Eden. The only place on earth safe from the outside modern world and their technology.
While the Sagan family is fighting and protecting the daughters of Eve one daughter escapes. She sees no end to how far man will go to destroy the world and does what she feels is her duty to do. Perform an action which will trigger a start of several natural catastrophes that will eventually end the Earth. It is a race against time for the other sisters to arrive at Eden to try and stop what is happening facing one unexpected crisis after another. Will they make it? Will they survive? You will have to read the book first. LOL
I love how this book place more emphasis on the story than on the romance because, one there is little time for romance in the story line, and two the plot is just so good without it. The book also focus more on all of the characters and the relationships that the sisters have develop with the Sagan men. Each character has to rely on the strengths of one another to survive, if they survive.
Writing reviews are hard for me due to the fact that I don't want to tell anyone how to view a book. I like people to get their own ideas on how this book is. With this said I really enjoyed the book as much as the first. The one thing that sticks out to me is when the Templar's need a car they can hotwire with no problem. I enjoy how the sisters always wonder if it is something they learn with their training. Alex finds out that yes, it is part of the training for the Templar's. I am looking forward to starting book 3 The Seven Seals (Daughters of Eve)
I have to say I really got in the story staying up late just to read a little bit more. The book was a net improvement on the previous (as regards writing skills and story composition). So I am trying to find time to read the next in the series.
It's a book written bad. It has a few inconsistencies - it says they steal a car without a key and a few pages later they start the car with a key they never had or found; and since when Greece is at the ocean? For me, it's a bad book, but I do not like leaving books at the middle so I read it. I will read the last book of the series but my hopes are not high.