

Depending on your tastes, this could swing in his favour, but I thought he was a bit of a jerk. Jared, on the other hand, takes the stereotypical bad boy role.

He didn’t patronise her and supported the fact she had no idea what she was doing but was still a valuable member for the team. Lukas is friendly and more open with Kennedy, and therefore the one I was rooting for. And, if you can’t create a love triangle with non-related teens, that only leaves the twins to both have affections for Kennedy. But Jared and Lukas, now there are two eligible bachelors.

Priest is the youngest, so he’s out of the running for Kennedy’s love interest. There’s a love triangle, there’s some conflict and there’s mystery reminiscent of National Treasure and The Da Vinci Code. Sounds good, right? With lack of preparation, because Kennedy had no idea a demon world existed, she joins well trained Priest, Alara and twins, Jared and Lukas, who are skeptical about her abilities to help. After tragedy, Kennedy and The Legion’s offspring must take up their parents’ roles in saving the world. It was such a snappy start, and really drew me in!Īs the book unfolds, we discover that Kennedy’s mother was part of something called The Legion, with three others, and as a group helped to protect the world from demons. Kennedy, the protagonist, stumbles across a graveyard and has a supernatural experience with a poltergeist. What really intrigued me was the beginning. Unmarked brought the plot flooding back, which I think is a really successful element of a second book, but bare with me if this review is a little sparse…it has been over a year since I read this! Still, it’s worth mentioning what a fun and fast paced beginning of a series it was, and it deserves credit that Unmarked doesn’t match. After reading the sequel, Unmarked, I realised I hadn’t written a review for Unbreakable, the first in The Legion trilogy.
