"We were a man and a woman working off debts to one another's souls."
I think this trilogy is going down as one of my favorite reads of 2022, and February is not even over yet. This didn't hit me as hard as the first one, thankfully, but I feel weird after reading this. It's like I just experienced something and I can't describe it for the life of me.
All I know is I have a book hangover. Again.
Just like Somebody and Someone, this book is very much unique. It takes you for a ride again, but I sort of saw a bit of it coming so it didn't have the same impact. In any case, and because I can't really say a lot about it without spoiling it, I'm making some general remarks again.
Like the first one, I couldn't stop reading.
"Let me save you tonight."
Bowen and Remi pulled me in. Again. I was lost in their story, in who they are, in a narrative that I knew wasn't going to end in this book. And I still couldn't help but feel all of it in my bones, all the emotions oozing off the page.
These two people feel so raw and so real to me it's hard not to talk about them as if they're real-life people. And the way they love is the way you'd want to be loved.
Although I still liked Remi, I was 100% with Bowen on this one. I could feel what he was going through, and it brought tears to my eyes.
"Somehow. Someway. Well, this was my way. I would tear the gates of hell down if need be."
There's so much angst, so much regret, desperation and straight up fear, of loving and losing, in this book. And regardless of how you spin it, it all leads to one thing: love. Love is at the root of all of it, the kind of love where nothing and no one else matters. The kind of love that makes you risk it all.
Somehow and Someway ends in yet another cliffhanger, and I can't wait for the final book. All I ask for is the happily ever after these two characters deserve.
Honestly, if anyone deserves it, it's them. Life and the world owes it to them.
Brilliant, Ms. Martinez. Just brilliant.