Ratings3
Average rating3.3
Don't miss the highly anticipated final installment of the steamy romantasy series everyone on BookTok is talking about! After Lor makes the biggest mistake of her life, she finds herself on the run from the Aurora King and decides it's time to end this, once and for all. But when a new enemy emerges to claim her freedom, the entire fate of Ouranos comes to rest on her shoulders. As the land continues to rebel, Lor must admit she is the key to saving the continent, whether she likes it or not. To fight for Nadir, she must lie, steal, and do whatever it takes to hunt down the remaining arks. Growing more and more desperate, she worries her actions are turning her into something she doesn't recognize, dooming her to repeat her grandmother's mistakes. When the Aurora King finally comes for her, Lor ventures into the Underworld's shadowy depths, where, once again, she finds herself at the heart of another deadly test. Only this time, she's competing for everyone's future, not just a crown. The only thing Lor ever wanted was to be free, but she may soon find she was always destined for a cage.
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4 primary booksArtefacts of Ouranos is a 4-book series with 4 primary works first released in 2022 with contributions by Nisha J. Tuli.
Reviews with the most likes.
I loved the first book, I told everyone I knew to read it because it was so good. The second book was great, the third book was good and this... I'm really sorry this is how it ends.
In the earlier books they went in all kick-ass, assuming they'd win. This book was just them expecting to die and telling each other how much they love each other (repeatedly). There was no sass or banter. There was a scene involving the throne room (too much like Iron Flame), there was a cabin in the snow filled woods (too much like ACOTAR). Just when I thought the end was near there was another Trial. It was all about forgiveness and not carrying anger with you, and whilst that's very noble that's not who the characters were through the first three books, and I liked them for that reason. They were real and hurt and wanted revenge. This was not revenge.
For something that started with grit it was too neatly packaged up at the end with no great sacrifice. I get why it had to be this way, but I'm sorry it was.