The second book in the Sorceline series, like the first the art and the fantasy are excellent. But just like the first, the story is disjointed and the world is explained so awkwardly it feels like the writer is making things up at breakneck speed and never going back to edit. I'd be more forgiving of the book (I'm not the target audience, etc, etc), but the ending is painfully frustrating. The day is basically saved by luck, none of the protagonists' efforts are of any relevance, it's total unpredictable chance that they win in the end. And then at the very end the protagonists decide to team up with the sociopath vampire who was torturing half of the characters for most of the book.
The spectacle of this book is good (though I must say, it's baffling why they choose such small pages with this quality art and eye-straining font), but the story is a shambling mess. My daughter is more the target audience, but she was much more eager to continue the series after the first book than she was after this one. It's just hard to stay attached to the characters when the pace is so disorienting and so many things happen for no apparent reason. I honestly hope this series drops from her memory so I don't have to be bothered with any future books.