![]() I didn’t understand the Augur’s magic right away (okay, this could really be my fault for being slow? I had just moved when I read this book, so now that I’m thinking back I wonder how much was just me not putting pieces together because I was tired.) but I definitely felt intrigued by it and by the stakes it set up. When she has a confrontation with the leader of the boys who harass her, I felt like Wren Hunt got super intriguing. Was she afraid because they had physically hurt her in the past? Or that they could start hurting her? I felt like I missed something maybe. But I couldn’t really grasp something about it. The boys chased Wren, and she’s terrified, and they’re big enough that they could really hurt her, so obviously she was afraid. I feel like I had a hard time understanding the beginning of the story. It took a bit for me to really get into Wren Hunt. Caught in a web of deceit, Wren must decide whether or not to gamble on the spell and seal the Augurs’ fate. ![]() Cassa has spent her life researching a transformative spell, which could bring the war between the factions to its absolute end. In a desperate bid to save her family, Wren takes a dangerous undercover assignment-as an intern to an influential Judge named Cassa Harkness. But now that power lies with the Judges, who are set on destroying her kind for good. ![]() ![]() Once her people, the Augurs, controlled a powerful magic. Every Christmas, Wren is chased through the woods near her isolated village by her family’s enemies-the Judges-and there’s nothing that she can do to stop it. ![]()
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