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Everley Donovan and her husband, Jamison Callahan, have faced a lot of danger and close calls through various lands of creation to try to defeat the immortal and evil Prince Killian, who not only killed all of Everley’s family when she was young but collapsed a whole world. Now, they’re back in their own land, hiding out and biding their time in Jamison’s family manor. Killian is still at large and even more powerful, and the foolish queen of their country has a price on Everley’s head because she thinks she’s a sorceress and a murderer. So it’s only a matter of time until Everley is taken into custody or Killian finds her and causes more trouble. But she and her friends are hoping that the prince’s older sister, the queen of the elves in the Land of Promise, will help them and bring Killian to justice.
In this final book of the trilogy, Everley and her friends fight with all they have to protect their world and the other worlds still existing, and they visit the land of the elves and the land of the merrows again, as well as the land of the giants. Killian’s actions keep doing more and more damage to the lands of the Creator and are fracturing the balance of time. It seems impossible that a girl with a clock heart can do anything to stop him, let alone bring back balance to creation, but Everley is certainly going to try.
Everafter Song seemed to me the strongest and most compelling of all the books. Everley comes more into her own and commits to not only the quest she must complete, but her feelings for Jamison and desire for a future with him. The characters fight hard for their people and all the Creator’s worlds. The story flowed nicely and I was pleased with how it all came together in the end.
Rated: Moderate, for occasional mild language and frequent violence. The violence isn’t usually gory but it’s going on for most of the story. Sexual content includes kissing and one scene in which the married couple have sex, without any details shared.
* I received an ARC of this book in exchange for my honest review.
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