I am going to try to pack as much as I can into this spoiler free review because this book is not something to be spoiled. The reader needs to read this with their own eyes, they need to feel this book. So, no spoilers. I started this book after doing a reread of Archangel’s Heart only because I wanted to be prepared in case this book was a continuation of AH but while it is a continuation of a sort, a reread isn’t necessary. But it did help to immerse me in the world of Archangel’s and vampires. Archangel’s Prophecy is no slow burn of a book, Singh throws us into the deep end of this book and our only choices are to read or die. That’s it. Read or Die.
Singh set it up so that we are immediately put into Elena’s thought process. We are submerged from the beginning and because of this we get a real feel of everything she feels, hears and even touches. It was a brilliant but also heartbreaking experience for me. With everything going on in this book and being so deeply attuned with Elena I found that I couldn’t help but continuously look at the percent of pages I had left to read, like it was a ticking bomb. Even at only twenty-three percent of the way through I felt like it was all happening to fast, and everything was spinning out of control. Nothing I did let me slow down. I would liken it to doing ninety on the freeway, wind in your hair, joy singing through your veins and then realizing your brakes were not working. There was urgency in everything, something was happening and whether we liked it or not, it was to happen, and nothing would be the same.
It is very apparent that this book encapsulated everything that Elena and Raphael had been through. From their start to where they were at this point. It was kind of like an ode to them as a couple, but it also lifted the threads of friendship and partners, of bonds and loyalties. Nothing was over looked, everything reminded you of everyone. This was not just about Elena and Raphael; this book was about everyone who had been in their lives and those who had come into it. A reminder that although it is very much about these two people, there are people who surround them, love them, tie them to each other and make them stronger. It highlighted all the good and the bad and at times it was way too dark but never smothering. Archangel’s Prophecy for me is meant to give us hope. Yes, things don’t always go as planned but you must roll with the punches but never forget to throw some punches of your own.
This Guild Hunter book showed us what could happen when you let grief cloud over your better judgment, when you don’t surround yourself with people who love you unconditionally. When I think back on what I read, I can’t help but think about what Elena could have become had she not had people who loved her in her corner. Had she let the angry and grief consume her after Slater Patelis. Scary thought that, but then I remember… Elena is better than that. She is too strong for that.
I loved everything about this book, Singh managed to give me all my favorite characters without it being overwhelming. Jammed packed with emotion and so much happening at once I can’t help but be in awe of how Singh kept it altogether. Archangel’s Prophecy flowed with no hiccups and delivered. When I finished the book, I was a little put out because usually cliffhangers don’t happen in Guild Hunter books, there is always something of an “ending” for us never a legitimate cliffhanger. This ending was a cliffhanger to end all cliffhangers and I was not prepared for it. I was left repeating “what” for twenty minutes after I finished the book. But I wouldn’t change a thing because oh man was that one hell of a ride. Hopefully we won’t have to wait two years for the next book, my heart wouldn’t survive.