Meh. This book started off promising, but the more you got into it, the more boring it got.
I thought this book was going to be a lot different. I was expecting more of a magical realism plot, like you get with Sarah Addison Allen, but instead, you have a women's magic order that you get the explanation of at the end, and throughout the book, you're left with the knowledge that the High Sister, who, in this case, is named Autumn, needs to leave, and she has to pick someone to replace her.
At first I enjoyed the little snippets of the women's lives, who are the women on Autumn's list to replace her. Then, we got to Anna. I didn't like her as a character (although, that could absolutely just be on me, because I have a coworker by the same name who I can't stand), I didn't like her story, and that's when I started to lose interest. Of course, it also had to do with the slut shaming that was introduced with her story, and the fact that the man she's in love with runs his hands through his hair, and that's "girly".
I was also upset by the fact that those snippets really are just snippets. We don't really learn about all the women's lives after everything happens. How did Ellie cope with what happened to her? What did she do? Did she change? We don't know.
The ending was wrapped up nicely. It's explained why Autumn chose who she did, why the women were on the list in the first place, and then why she didn't choose them. I did enjoy that. However, we're still left with a sense of wondering, because Autumn leaves, and that's it. She doesn't even say goodbye. Not really. I heard that the author was originally going to write 13 books, but after this one, she chose to not write any others, which is, honestly, really annoying.
The writing wasn't that great, and in some parts, were really cheesy and uneven. The line that sticks out to me the most was, "'I'm soooo ready', said Sylvie. She was!" Not only is it cringe worthy, it caught me completely off guard. Throughout the entirety of the book, I can't think of any other instance the author commented on a character, so why did she do it here? The use of the many o's to draw out the word were also annoying. I understand Sylvie is a teenager, but, really.
To get really blunt, the author should probably not write books, ever. The premise was interesting, but too long and drawn out, she doesn't have the ability to write in different voices, her syntax isn't great, and she doesn't know how to hold a reader in. I only finished it to see who she chose, and, honestly, you could just skip to the end, because it doesn't make a difference anyway.
Two stars, because it wasn't the worst book I read, but, you get the idea.