The Immortal Highlander
Format: kindle
ASIN: B000FC1VQ0
Publish date: August 3rd 2004
Publisher: Delacorte Press
Pages no: 400
Edition language: English
Category:
Fantasy,
Paranormal,
Science Fiction,
Cultural,
Historical Fiction,
Romance,
Paranormal Romance,
Adult,
Fairies,
Fae,
Historical Romance,
Time Travel,
Scotland
Series: Highlander (#6)
Adam Black is in quite a pickle. Having advocated for the human Druid, he's forced to save Dageus MacKeltar's life at the end of The Dark Highlander by sacrificing some of his immortal life-force...And then Aoibheal, the Fairy Queen, exacts her own form of punishment. Now Adam is human...And invisib...
Every time I finish one of the books in this series, I always think “that was my favorite!” Seriously, this one is my favorite. It was so good. I just love Adam Black. He’s shown his face in a few of the previous books, and it was so nice to hear his story. They’ve all been pretty sweet, but this on...
Well, that was a disappointment. Or maybe I loved Drustan and Dageus so much that Adam just felt kind of meh in comparison. And that seriously pissed me off, because Adam's story should have rocked. I guess it's unfair to blame Adam. I should be blaming Gabby, because she was b-o-r-i-n-g. I expect...
As another reviewer said "Adam Black is a hero you either love to hate or hate to love." I'm in the love to hate camp. My view of him is tainted by his actions in Moning's first book in the Highlander series, Beyond the Highland Mist. In his first appearance he is seductive but only as a means to...
Um, yes, I'd like a Highlander of my own please. I really enjoyed Adam Black's story, much more than I thought I would. A little more of the Fae in this one, and I can see the threads of the Fever series really starting to tie together with the Highlander series.