Synopsis:
She’s a wanted criminal, but he doesn’t have to know that.
Piper’s job is simple.Take the children.
Don’t get caught.
The rules she binds on herself; however… Well, they’re a tad more complicated.
Kidnapped as a child for her connection with the Old Magic—the one that grants her the ability to enchant others with her music—Piper knows good and well the rules of the Coup, the underground organization intent on bringing down the fae regime. As the Coup’s first “recruiter,” she’s supposed to take the strong, the good-boned, the clever, the healthy.
Except Piper doesn’t always do what she’s supposed to.
Instead, she makes a few rules of her own.
Like how she only takes the children who need taking—the children who suffer harm and neglect in their current homes, the ones who come with her willingly.
The children for whom a life bound in service to the Coup would be a mercy.
But when a deadly oversight leaves Piper injured, stranded in the forest, and unable to protect the no-nonsense child to whom she’s promised a better life, she’s left with no other choice. She strikes a bargain with a handsome archer whose aim is almost as deadly as his past.
Oh, but there’s another rule too.
Don’t fall in love.
Especially not with a human who has no idea who Piper really is.
Fast-paced and action-packed, this second installment in The Severed Realms series transports the reader across Alondria to Avelea, a kingdom full of wicked forest faeries, underground rebellions, and a king with a secret of his own.
A Tune to Make Them Follow is the second book in a series of interconnected fairytale retellings. This book can serve as a standalone, or as an entry point into the series.
Review:
This book has everything; found family, yearning for belonging and desire to know you’re wanted and cared for beyond just your abilities and what you can do for others. That being said, from the beginning Piper is a very likeable heroine, and I think many will relate to her for everyone feels sometimes that they are not enough, or that the others around them deserve more or better. This book does a great job of showing nature versus nurture as well as how the smallest gestures and acts can end up ultimately changing your entire life. I couldn’t stop reading this, and certainly loved Marcus, Piper and Amity instantly. This is the type of book that grips you and you just want to keep reading, reading, reading. Cannot wait to see what comes next in this delectable series!
Star rating: ✯✯✯✯✯