

You can always tell a person loves you when they tease you like that and poke fun at your faults. Oh, and of course, the innuendo and teasings. I do love the virtual bit where he stabs himself in the hand to become virtually part of the environment. The take on Persephone and Hades was neat too, giving Hades a very bad mojo and Persephone a very sympathetic vibe.Īlthough the computer lingo was a bit better in this one, I still had some difficulty understanding some of the things. Three different personalities as well, driven towards one ultimate goal. I love that the author portrays the three-headed dog as three different species of dogs when it comes to their heads. I like the idea that Ravirn's a bit shy of his new identity.Ĭerberus! I love it. I found I could understand some of the things I'd misunderstood in the first one better once they were summarized in this book.

And the relationship with Cerice became interesting, especially after the tidbit with Tisiphone in the elevator.įantastic setup. The goddess of chaos gets him every time. You can always tell a person loves you when they tease you like that and poke fun at your faults without doing it in a mean way. I love it that he’s growing even though he doesn’t want to. Ravirn is learning stubbornly what it means to be the Raven and interacting with the Furies and other gods on a whole new level. The take McCullough has on Persephone and Hades was neat too, giving Hades a very bad mojo and Persephone a very sympathetic vibe.Īlthough the computer lingo was a bit better in this one, I still had some difficulty understanding some of the things. I like the idea that Ravirn’s a bit shy of his new identity.Ĭerberus is introduced in this book! I love it.

I found I could understand some of the things I’d misunderstood in the first one better once they were summarized in this book. Ravirn is in trouble again – imagine that! Feeling badly for leaving Cerice’s AI familiar in Hell, Ravirn and Melchior, his own AI, plan a trip to Hell to get her back.
