![]() ![]() ![]() One of the character’s parents are getting divorced, and when he says that the splitting up of his parents feels like it will destroy his family, Roshani is quick to remind her readers that families can have one parent of two parents of the same gender without being broken. There were a few parts that left me feeling a little weird though. ![]() I whipped through it like it was nothing. It had the humor and mythological accuracy of a Rick Riordan book while still holding on to the magical beauty of a Roshani Chokshi novel. ![]() Together they’ll battle demons, travel through a glittering and dangerous serpent realm, and discover that their enemy isn’t at all who they expected. Along with her soul-sister, Mini, Aru will team up with Brynne, an ultra-strong girl who knows more than she lets on, and Aiden, the boy who lives across the street and is also hiding plenty of secrets. But, for better or worse, she won’t be going it alone. If she doesn’t find the arrow by the next full moon, she’ll be kicked out of the Otherworld. If that weren’t bad enough, somehow Aru gets framed as the thief. Instead, they’re turning people into heartless fighting-machine zombies. The god of love’s bow and arrow have gone missing, and the thief isn’t playing Cupid. Aru is only just getting the hang of this whole Pandava thing when the Otherworld goes into full panic mode. ![]()
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