Tuesday, July 26, 2016

LT ⇰ Get Titan in Chains (Broken Heroes One) (Volume 1) RTF by Zoe Perdita eBook free

Titan in Chains (Broken Heroes One) (Volume 1) They call him Titan. On the surface they should be enemies, but Patrick's the only person who understands what it's like to have the whole world expect stuff from you -- stuff Calder's not sure he can give. Calder King has it all: a footbal

TITLE:Titan in Chains (Broken Heroes One) (Volume 1)
AUTHOR:Zoe Perdita
RATING:4.87 (702 Votes)
ASIN:1514768976
FORMAT TYPE:Paperback
NUMBER of PAGES:256 Pages
PUBLISH DATE:2015-06-29
GENRE:

Titan in Chains (Broken Heroes One) (Volume 1)

Titan in Chains (Broken Heroes One) (Volume 1)

They call him Titan. Calder King has it all: a football scholarship at a prestigious university, a guaranteed position as CEO of his family's company (someday) and all the hot co-eds he can handle, but Calder is way more interested in his missing memories and the weird things he can do -- like his super strength and invulnerability. Not to mention the crazy vigilantes terrorizing the city, the ones Calder alone (aka Titan) can handle. Enter super genius Patrick Black. Not only is he Calder's new college roommate, he's also the ward of the man Calder's family despises. On the surface they should be enemies, but Patrick's the only person who understands what it's like to have the whole world expect stuff from you -- stuff Calder's not sure he can give. Never mind that Patrick is also openly gay and way too hot for his own good. Because Calder is straight, and Patrick doesn't date straight

EDITORIAL :

REVIEW :

She went on to write a number of other novels, and one other collection (Mothers and Other Monsters, also recommended), and has been spending time writing Alternate Reality Games and is now writing film scripts. It took me to
many places that I didn't expect to go, & also deprived me of sleep
because I didn't want to stop reading! I think it only took 3 sessions to
get through 647 pages!

I cried for 15 minutes at the end.

Highly recommended (& if you read it, I suspect you'll understand
why I didn't want to give away very many details). It begins well, but then becomes jumbled together and skips around. Some books are actually condescending in attitude, some patronizing. I recently posted a thought about this on a highly trafficked social networking site, which hyperbolically sums up this long-simmering feeling about the need for less singularly

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