Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Archangel: Raven Mistcreek, Book 3

Rate this book
Ambushed on their way to Mistcreek Manor,
Raven, Kasumi, and Zita are forced into a lower level of the Continuum.
The fight leads them to Raven's old school.
But little is as it seems.

Powerful eldritch forces conspire against Mistcreek Manor.
The Qualitative Continuum weakens as the Seals that bind reality are shattered.
Abominations that should not be begin to gain a foothold in higher levels of the universe.

Armed with her ability to bring chalk drawings to life, Raven struggles
to get back home before it is destroyed.
Demons have found ways of breaking the Continuum,
but is there a way to heal it?

320 pages, Kindle Edition

Published March 25, 2024

4 people want to read

About the author

N.R. LaPoint

22 books4 followers
N.R. LaPoint is a lover of pulp stories filled with aspirational heroes, bizarre worlds, and terrible creatures. He lives deep within the Great Wisconsin Wilderness with his family, numerous musical instruments, and a large personal library.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
4 (100%)
4 stars
0 (0%)
3 stars
0 (0%)
2 stars
0 (0%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Steven R. McEvoy.
3,906 reviews182 followers
April 4, 2024
This is the seventh novel and eighth story I have read by LaPoint. I said it before and I say it again, with each I am more impressed with his style, skills, and range. I had not read the description before picking this up. I picked up all his available books wile in the middle of reading a previous story. I loved the first book in this series, Chalk, Dusklight took the action, adventure and horror to a whole new level, and this one amped it up again. But in this one some new help comes, and some new skills are learned.

The description of this volume is:

“Ambushed on their way to Mistcreek Manor,
Raven, Kasumi, and Zita are forced into a lower level of the Continuum.
The fight leads them to Raven's old school.
But little is as it seems.

Powerful eldritch forces conspire against Mistcreek Manor.
The Qualitative Continuum weakens as the Seals that bind reality are shattered.
Abominations that should not be begin to gain a foothold in higher levels of the universe.

Armed with her ability to bring chalk drawings to life, Raven struggles
to get back home before it is destroyed.
Demons have found ways of breaking The Continuum,
but is there a way to heal it?”

This story has a prologue that gives us some more insight to Percy Dayspring’s background. We also find out why he has a weapon he supposedly should not and why his devotion and attention to Raven is so intense. Why he left the Knights of Saint Benedict. There is a statement at the end of the prologue:

““Our roles here will be revealed to us in due time. If not in this world, then in the next. Part of our duty here is to protect those we love.””

The sentiment or role, plans, and living out our duty is a key element of this volume in the series. Not only for Percy, but for his best friend Damien, for his fiancé Lady Raven Mistcreek, and for others we encounter in this story. But from that prologue we enter directly into the action, the opening words of the first chapter are:

“I was surrounded by dead bodies, and only half of them were my fault.

“What just happened?” I squeaked. “I thought the route was supposed to be safe!”

We were only a day out from Dusklight Castle on our way to Mistcreek Manor when the abominations struck in the middle of the night. Hideous constructs with the skins of beasts sewn over them, then animated by black magic. Mismatched claws and jaws, all worked around armatures of furniture, wires, bone, and other random objects.”

And from there the action continues across the world, up and down the continuum, and even through a portal into hell. This is by in far the most intense of the novels I have read by LaPoint. It was incredibly hard to put down. We have action, aadventure, battles, encounters with creatures assumed to be mythological, and support from friends both old and new. For a time Raven returns to Girls school from our realm, and strives to save the girls as she battles her way through the school and against the bosses at the end of each level. We have the appearance again of Saint Michael the Archangel, and we have gifts bestowed to help immediately and in the coming battles.

There is an epic battle for Mistcreek Manor. And though the story ends the war is far from over. The ending leaves leaves you desperate for the next installement and based on hits given in the story and the pace so far I can only assume there are still a number of volumes to be released in the series.

This was an excellent read. I have already shared the books with my niece and he mother wants to read them as well. Before I had even finished book 1 I sent a copy my nice as a birthday present and she is very excited about the book and series. And I am excited to share them with my youngest two also.

This was a great read in an excellent series. Catholic fiction at its best. I can easily recommend this story for anyone who loves a good fantasy with more than a modicum of horror mixed it. Another excellent volume from Lapoint’s masterful pen.

This book is part of a series of reviews: 2024 Catholic Reading Plan!
Profile Image for Josh Griffing.
31 reviews
August 7, 2025
All That And The Schoolhouse Sinks

The action doesn't let up, it seems. I picked this up a couple of years after reading the prior book, and am flung right back against the same safety-bars like I never got off the ride.

LaPoint's Miss Mistcreek is to Magical Schoolgirl manga what Declan Finn's St. Tommy NYPD is to superhero detective comics. Here the action never lets up, the weird horrors the heroes fight are cranked up past eleven again (is that the knob on the floor, or something from Dante?) and the explosions, monster dismemberments, and holy Impossibles never quite stop. We also now have some whispers of a story arc, and with it the promise of more whirlwind adventures yet to come.

Raven has almost all of her old friends, and a few new ones, fighting at her side as her old school goes halfway to hell (literally), and she battles with blood-magicians and the Seven Deadly Sins. (Fans of the cuttlefish will be glad to see him undamaged when he finally makes his entrance.) Cerberus is a good doggy, and the caves beneath The Mountains of Madness are hardly a tourist spot compared to what now threatens the Mistcreek girls and their allies. LaPoint throws just about everything imaginable at them, including several things that he shouldn't be able to throw, things that would make S. King and Lovecraft wet their beds at night, and his heroes meet them all with the same say-a-prayer-and-blow-it-to-hell approach that defines a LaPoint protagonist. Or if it can't be blown to hell, saw it in half with a badass double chainsaw or a smartmetal sword. One uses the weapon one has.

The biggest problem with his books, I find again, is that I find really should have been sleeping but my nose was stuck.

Read it. ASAP.
84 reviews4 followers
April 12, 2024
Best yet

I normally hate sequels. Book 2 wasn't bad, but book 3 may be the best of the series so far. I am really enjoying the pace and characters. The weird world basically makes sense at this point. I'm waiting for an explanation of Yogoth, but otherwise it all connects. I am honestly looking forward to book 4.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews