Immortal (Fallen Angels, #6)

Immortal (Fallen Angels, #6)

J.R. Ward

Enjoyment: 3.0Quality: 4.0Characters: 4.0Plot: 2.0

From the #1 New York Times bestselling author who has kept readers on the edge of their seats with her phenomenal Fallen Angels novels, comes one of the most heart-stirring and eagerly anticipated events in that acclaimed series. The Creator invented the game, and the stakes are nothing less than the fate of the quick and the dead: seven souls, seven crossroads. Reluctant savior Jim Heron has compromised himself, his body and his soul, and yet he’s on the verge of losing everything... ...Including Sissy, the innocent he freed from Hell. Jim’s determined to protect her—but this makes her a weakness the demon Devina can exploit. With Jim torn between the game and the woman he’s sworn to defend, evil’s more than ready to play dirty. Humanity’s savior is prepared to do anything to win—even embark on a suicide mission into the shadows of Purgatory. True love is Jim’s only hope for survival—and victory. But can a man with no heart and no soul be saved by something he doesn’t believe in?


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  • enerinaz
    Mar 09, 2025
    Enjoyment: Quality: Characters: Plot:

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  • DocRobReads
    Mar 26, 2025
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  • Cheri
    Apr 04, 2025
    Enjoyment: 3.0Quality: 4.0Characters: 4.0Plot: 2.0

    As this was the last book in this series, there will be spoilers for the previous books and the series as a whole, but not for this particular book. This book is, by far, the shortest of the bunch. A bit confusing since the premise of the series is Jim saving seven souls, and there are only six books. This is a twofer, two souls to be saved and/or lost in this book, yet it’s the shortest. Overall, I liked this book for the romance (finally) Jim and Sissy were able to explore. At least a little bit. Yet it seemed as though the author was just ready to pack it in with this series and end it already. While things made sense in a broad way, there were things that didn’t make sense for particular characters. With the first soul to be saved in this story, it was a blink and you missed it type of situation. The setup of the character is obvious pretty early on, but nothing is done for a bit after you know (but the characters do not) who it is. Then the soul is faced with their crossroads and – blip – it’s over. Very anticlimactic after how the series had played out until this point. Listen, I have come to love these characters even if I don’t always love their decisions or actions. That’s what kept me reading. I was on book 19 of the Black Dagger Brotherhood series, The King, before I realized this series is in the same universe. This is the book that was published after The King, so I went back to play catch-up and wanted to read this series before continuing on with BDB. I can say with 95% confidence that skipping this series will not give you any holes in the BDB stories. That 5% uncertainty comes from Lassiter. He is mentioned a few times in this series and even more at the end of this particular book.

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