Blame the Guinness. Blame her slimeball ex. Blame the mysterious old woman who swore there was a “lucky moon pond” hidden in the woods.Either way, Bronx-born Bernadette Adelson absolutely should not be tiptoeing through dark Irish forest at midnight on her last night abroad. But she’s desperate for a little luck—and maybe a boyfriend who doesn’t belong in a trash compactor. Instead, she stumbles into a prophecy, faceplants into magic… and accidentally wakes a blisteringly gorgeous Irish god.
Yes. A god.
Lugh of the Tuatha de Danann—tall, glowing, muscled like a mythological lumberjack, and about as humble as a rockstar in a hall of mirrors.
Before she can process the “oh crap” of it all, a Fae Prince strolls out behind him—equally hot, equally shirtless—and their dog of war, Faellin. A dog of war?
Turns out Bernadette didn’t just wake Lugh—she shattered an ancient curse. Now the god of all-things-heroic has a “blood debt” to repay and insists on following her home. To the Bronx. Because blending in with two divine himbos and a horse-sized murder dog is exactly what her life needed.
And that’s before the banshees, rival gods, and cranky druids start showing up.
Bernadette’s ordinary life is about to get torched, remixed, and slathered in Celtic chaos. Because once you wake a god, nothing stays normal—and everything gets a little ridiculous.
Siren’s Song for the Irish God launches the Celtic Knot series—a fast, funny, flirty urban fantasy where ancient mythology crashes headfirst into city living. Snarky heroines, hot-as-hell gods, and magic gone sideways? Welcome to Bernadette’s new normal. Buckle up.
I read all the books one right after the other. Couldn’t wait to see what happened next. The characters were so real. It felt like I was there. Can’t wait to read more (like everything) by this author!
This book set is a totally wild ride from start to finish. Full of mythical mayhem and wild adventure.Definitely will keep you guessing from start to finish and keep you turn the page to find out what happens next. Definitely worth the money spent buying it.