
The action in Flight of the Fallen begins soon after the conclusion of Magebike Courier book one Road to Ruin. Sometimes you can pick up the second book in a duology and it doesn't matter that you haven't read the first, this is not one of those (not sure if I can think of any duologies like that actually).
The heart of this story of polyamorous queer throuple spend the first part of the book split but its our now talentless magebike rider bearing the worse but with the discovery of a possible map to the first city of the gods, thanks to a timely influx of refugees from a collapse city, Princess Yi-Nireen and Jin-Li are off into the wastes while our big hearted third Kadrin trying to redeem Princess Yi-Nireen, save his family and deal with a religious leader whose motto is death before change.
Hana Lee's gritty, queer Mad Max–inspired fantasy second novel is as thrilling as the first and brings everyone and everything into a satisfying conclusion.
The action in Flight of the Fallen begins soon after the conclusion of Magebike Courier book one Road to Ruin. Sometimes you can pick up the second book in a duology and it doesn't matter that you haven't read the first, this is not one of those (not sure if I can think of any duologies like that actually).
The heart of this story of polyamorous queer throuple spend the first part of the book split but its our now talentless magebike rider bearing the worse but with the discovery of a possible map to the first city of the gods, thanks to a timely influx of refugees from a collapse city, Princess Yi-Nireen and Jin-Li are off into the wastes while our big hearted third Kadrin trying to redeem Princess Yi-Nireen, save his family and deal with a religious leader whose motto is death before change.
Hana Lee's gritty, queer Mad Max–inspired fantasy second novel is as thrilling as the first and brings everyone and everything into a satisfying conclusion.