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A review by cometreadings
The Girl by Lola St. Vil
4.0
Guardians: The Girl is the first book in the Guardians Series. In this paranormal romance, Lola StVil describes what happens to a sixteen New Yorker, Emerson Baxter, when discovers a new world of angels and demons.
In this new reality, where good and evil are divided into many groups and roles, Emmy will find and lose true friends, and her feelings will be turned upside down by the presence of the first guardian, Marcus. Although in a normal situation she would act as the good girl and respect the relationship between Marcus and Ameana, she finds impossible to control her feelings and also avoid him.
While Emmy needs to manage this relationship, the guardians, teen angels with superpowers, fight to save the humanity, seeking the important and most wanted clue in her past.
This was my first book by Lola StVil, and I find the storyline with so many twists and turns really entertaining. The characters are well described, and also their behaviors, that sometimes appear unlikely for the role they have in this battle to save the world, is okay if we consider their living like “teenagers”. For example, we could think about Emmy’s attitude which sometimes appears too courageous for her age, other times unbelievably unreasonable.
I appreciate the author’s descriptive style, and actually, I’m curious to read the second book in the Series.
In this new reality, where good and evil are divided into many groups and roles, Emmy will find and lose true friends, and her feelings will be turned upside down by the presence of the first guardian, Marcus. Although in a normal situation she would act as the good girl and respect the relationship between Marcus and Ameana, she finds impossible to control her feelings and also avoid him.
While Emmy needs to manage this relationship, the guardians, teen angels with superpowers, fight to save the humanity, seeking the important and most wanted clue in her past.
This was my first book by Lola StVil, and I find the storyline with so many twists and turns really entertaining. The characters are well described, and also their behaviors, that sometimes appear unlikely for the role they have in this battle to save the world, is okay if we consider their living like “teenagers”. For example, we could think about Emmy’s attitude which sometimes appears too courageous for her age, other times unbelievably unreasonable.
I appreciate the author’s descriptive style, and actually, I’m curious to read the second book in the Series.