This is a short story prequel to A World Without Angels.
Before angel Jerome fell to Earth, he was just an ordinary angel in the village. And before Leila started her adventure, she was a prisoner in her own home as the world crumbled around her.
In the prequel to A World Without Angels, see how life was for the angel and his girl before the adventure began.
Jamie was born into a big, crazy family of 6 children. Being the youngest, she always got away with anything and would never shut up. Constantly letting her imagination run wild, her teachers were often frustrated when her ‘What I did on the weekend’ stories contained bunyips and princesses.
Growing up, Jamie did the sensible things and obtained a Bachelor of Business degree from Southern Cross University and worked hard to gain her membership with the Institute of Chartered Accountants in Australia.
Yet nothing compared to writing. Quitting the rat race to spend quality time with her laptop named Lily, Jamie has written several novels and screenplays. Spanning a number of genres and mediums, Jamie writes whatever inspires her from ghost stories to teenage love stories to tantalising murder mysteries. Nothing is off limits.
A self-confessed television addict, dog lover, Taylor Swift fan, and ghost hunter, Jamie loves nothing more than the thrill of sharing her stories.
Really interesting. I'm curious as to what's going on in the world of the book to cause what is happening to happen. I'll look into reading the rest of the series.
This had angels so it was a no-brainer for me to pick it up and read it. I actually found the other books in the series first, but once I saw a prequel, I figured that would be the better place to start and I was right. This gives you background, a starting point of sorts for Jerome, the guardian angel and Leila the human. There was enough information given in this short story for me to become invested in what comes next for these two characters. It's a perfect beginning to their tale and I can't wait to read more. The author wrote this in such a way that I could easily visualize what was taking place, almost as if I was a part of the story with the characters. It is a great short read that leads into something more with full length books.