I don’t know why, I think it might have had something to do with the fact that I’d read The Diviners recently. For some reason, I thought that The Casquette Girls was going to be historical paranormal. This book is so close to being four stars, but there were three things that stopped it from getting that rating. But who can you trust in a city where everyone has a secret, and where keeping them can be a matter of life and death – unless, that is, you’re immortal. Mother Nature couldn’t drain the joie de vivre from the Big Easy, but someone or something is draining life from its residents.Ĭaught suddenly in a hurricane of eighteenth-century myths and monsters, Adele must quickly untangle a web of magic that links the climbing murder rate back to her own ancestors. Adele wants nothing more than for life to return to normal, but with the silent city resembling a mold-infested war zone, a parish-wide curfew, and mysterious new faces lurking in the abandoned French Quarter, normal will have to be redefined.Įvents too unnatural – even for New Orleans – lead Adele to an attic that has been sealed for three hundred years, and the chaos she unleashes threatens not only her life but everyone she knows. How: A copy of this novel was provided by Skyscape and Two Lions for review via Net Galley.Īfter the Storm of the Century rips apart New Orleans, Adele Le Moyne and her father are among the first to return to the city following the mandatory evacuation. What: The Casquette Girls (The Casquette Girls #1) by Alys Arden
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