Book Review: Harbinger Ronda Bowen, December 18, 2014January 1, 2015 If you’ve been looking for a book to read that’s part coming of age, part adventure, Harbinger by Lee French & Erik Kort is sure to fit that bill. This book is the second in “The Greatest Sin” series. In the first book, The Fallen, we meet Chavali and follow her adventures. The book was a lot of fun, and went quickly. I felt sad when the book was over, because there were no more pages! Title: Harbinger Series: The Greatest Sin #2 Author: Lee French and Erik Kort Publication Date: October 2014 Genre: Fantasy Synopsis Adjusting to her new life as a soul-bound agent of the Fallen has Chavali pushing herself harder than ever before. Between learning to fight, dealing with idiots, and climbing stairs – lots of stairs – she has little time to waste on thoughts of the future. Or the past. When another agent fails to report in, Chavali is sent on the mission to discover her fate. Ready or not, she saddles up for a new adventure with new dangers. The search takes her to Ket, a coastal city slathered in mystery. There, she faces ghosts from her past and demons of her future as she seeks answers. All she seems to find are more questions. Plague, murder, lies, espionage…this city harbors much more than meets the eye, and maybe too much to handle. Buy Links Amazon | Goodreads Author Bio Lee French lives in Olympia, WA with two kids, two bicycles, and too much stuff. She is an avid gamer and active member of the Myth-Weavers online RPG community, where she is known for her fondness for Angry Ninja Squirrels of Doom. In addition to spending much time there, she also trains year-round for the one-week of glorious madness that is RAGBRAI, has a nice flower garden with one dragon and absolutely no lawn gnomes, and tries in vain every year to grow vegetables that don’t get devoured by neighborhood wildlife. Website | Facebook | Twitter | Goodreads | Pinterest Erik Kort abides in the glorious Pacific Northwest, otherwise known as Mirkwood-Without-The-Giant-Spiders. Though the spiders often grow too numerous for his comfort. He is defended from all eight-legged threats by his brave and overly tolerant wife, and is mocked by his obligatory writer’s cat. When not writing, Erik comforts the elderly, guides youths through vast wildernesses, and smuggles more books into his library of increasingly alarming size. Twitter | Facebook | Goodreads Share this:Share Share on Pocket (Opens in new window) Pocket Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram Print (Opens in new window) Print Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook Share on X (Opens in new window) X Like this:Like Loading... Related Uncategorized