Evelyn Waldron died the night the Titanic sank—or so the world believes.
But the sea did not claim her. Something older did.
When Evelyn wakes twenty-eight years later, the year is 1941. The world has changed, and so has she. Her body has not aged. Her heart still carries the weight of fifteen hundred souls. Haunted by what she lost and the choices that doomed a ship, Evelyn tries to make peace with the life that should have ended long ago.
She's falling deeper for someone who sees through her silence—the man who reminds her that love is not reserved for the living. As their bond deepens, Evelyn begins to question what it means to be saved, and whether her second chance is a gift from the heavens or a cruel trick of fate.
But old ghosts do not rest easily, and her soul—once human, now something celestial—is far more powerful than anyone imagined. When the divine and the mortal collide, love becomes both her salvation and her undoing.
A luminous fantasy steeped in longing and redemption, Endless Forms Most Beautiful is the breathtaking finale to the Do No Harm duology—an exploration of grief, godhood, and the kind of love that transcends time itself.