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Revelation
Revelation
Revelation
Audiobook8 hours

Revelation

Written by Randi Cooley Wilson

Narrated by Jorjeana Marie

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

About this audiobook

Eve Collins starts her freshman year at college blissfully unaware that one revelation will challenge everything she's believed to be true about her family, life, and future, and right in the midst of it all is Asher St. Michael. Mysterious and aloof, Asher is appointed to protect Eve at all costs. Bound by his oath of loyalty to mankind, loving her is forbidden. Dark and enigmatic, Gage Gallagher may be even more dangerous to Eve than the demonic army that hunts her. Caught in the middle of a centuries-old war, Eve must choose sides knowing that the wrong choice will cost more than just her life. Can Asher and Eve fulfill their destinies, or will their love destroy everything?
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 5, 2016
ISBN9781515971146
Revelation

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Reviews for Revelation

Rating: 4.236111063888889 out of 5 stars
4/5

72 ratings2 reviews

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The ending is one of the best cliff hangers I have read in a while. Kate Brian has done an amazing job by revealing in this book that Sabine was the real killer of Cheyenne. Sabine is not as nice as we all thought. Especially when Reed confronts her and Sabine ends up pulling a gun on Reed. The final paragraph is Sabine pulling the trigger. What will happen next?!?
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    In Revelation, Reed finds herself ostracized from the Billings House. She now resides in a single room adjacent to her ex-boyfriend’s current girlfriend. Reed is in disbelief with how quickly she has fallen. Once she had everything within her grasp and now, well now. . . she’s an outcast.I liked that Reed had the chance to escape the chains of the Billings House. Together, these girls are so one-dimensional that it’s hard to like them. I thought Reed finally had the chance to discover her true self. She oscillated between grieving for her former life and taking a stand against those who doubted her involvement in Cheyenne’s murder.The only issue I had with the book was the author gave away the killer’s identity in one innocent sentence. As soon as I read it, I knew this person killed Cheyenne. The sentence was so random, so innocent, that if the reader wasn’t paying attention, he/she would have missed the clue. Now, on the other hand, the motive behind the murder and sending Reed those haunting e-mails, was a twist. I didn’t see THAT coming at all.