![]() ![]() ![]() Of course Victor is there to keep an eye on her, but nevertheless, she will start a chain of events that will craft the plot. Very determined to follow this life, she makes a plant to kill Hamburg, only to get herself into more trouble. After his wife became Sarai and Victor’s target at the end of book 1, she can’t get him out of her mind, because she believes he has to be killed for what he did. She wants to kill Arthur Hamburg, the grotesc traficant that drugged this wife and in this way, making her uses and lifeless. So, taking off where “Killing Sarai” ended, she has some unfinished business to take care of, even if she will do it alone. Yup, that pretty much sums up the plot:)Įven though Victor left Sarai to enable her to have a normal life after all this suffering, she can’t ignore the trigger that went on in her mind, the belonging of a way of life she is suppose to have. “Reviving Izabel” is the sequel of “Killing Sarai” and it centers Sarai transformation from prizonier of a drug lord to empowered assassin. Who would have guess that this type of story could be loved by me in such a way? I don’t think there is any flaw in the way J.A.Redmerski wrote this series, even if it’s controversial and shows a dark side of humanity that not many of us agree upon, but it’s still fabulous and addictive. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |