![]() ![]() At least Harry spends more than two days with Mary before he is willing to declare his undying love. In fact two days later she laments that it might tear her heart in two to leave him. Meagan meets a Centurion named Apollus Brutus Severillus (a really cool name), who happens to be the only Roman soldier who is competent, and is immediately convinced that he is the man of her dreams. People in Heimerdinger’s books seem incapable of meeting a person of the opposite sex without falling hopelessly in love. ![]() She even says things like “the good part… that is the part about me,” which is annoying and totally out of character for the mouthy, rebellious, Goth girl of the previous book. Meagan now sounds exactly like Melody did in the previous books. A significant number of the decisions that the characters make seem to have no other reason than to place them in the best position to observe some recorded historical event or meet some famous person. I find that Heimerdinger’s formula is starting to tire me. ![]()
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