As the enemy gains a stronghold in the underground, multitudes are recruited, marked, and repurposed. Kai must gather a band of broken, homeless kids and get back to the spiritual realm. But Negative Affinity Serum blocks his gifting.Plunged into a desperate struggle against time and Shasta, the race is on to rescue his friends and find a way back to the natural realm before Shasta deploys the multitude and turns society against Tau.
Dianne J. Wilson writes across genres including YA Fantasy and Romantic Suspense. Weaving Invisible into words, she explores spiritual truth woven through ordinary life with equal dashes of breathless adventure and tongue-in-cheek humor, all soaked in God's Grace. She writes in stolen moments, usually in the back seat of her tiny car.
Her home is in Makhanda, a South African university town, where she lives with her hubby and three daughters who all take turns at being home. Her love-language is tea and taking long drives to listen to new songs with her girls. When she’s not stuck in her car writing, you can find her feeding all the hungry people in her house who gaze at her expectantly around mealtimes.
I didn’t like this as much as Affinity, but it still kept me turning pages. Personally, I would have liked it better if the perspective remained more focused on Kai. I found it difficult and sometimes frustrating following two shifting POVs through a very confusing ‘other dimension’. And, because I had already developed an empathy for Kai in book one, I had a hard time relating to Zee. Otherwise, it is well-written and I look forward to the next book in the series.