In the heart-wrenching conclusion to The Halves of Us Trilogy, Richardson weaves a story that will have fans of Sarah J. Maas’ House of Earth and Blood glued to the page.
A single way, a single heart.
A single being, broken apart.
The battle has ended. The Sights have vanished. Aura is dead. Adie and the survivors returned to Giriveen in hopes of rebuilding, but they are stricken by Adie's secret deal with Wendelone when she comes for payment.
Auralee returns to the tower, planning her vengeance for Aura's death. But when hidden tunnels within the tower unravel secrets and the truth about the darkness on Thindoral, Auralee questions her position.
When true evil seeks them, the sisters are forced to come to a truce. Together, they discover the wicked truth of the original curse and its creator, proving there is no hiding from Fate.
Hypnoa's warnings hold true. Remember, a curse is deadliest when it is laced with love…
Even before Sydney could hold a pencil in her hand, she was making up stories in her head. Richardson wrote her first book in the second grade, Girls, about her best friends and herself in college [because college was super cool when you were 8] who went on treasure hunts and fought bad guys with their super powers. Richardson's second grade teacher was so impressed, she laminated a cover and bound it. That will forever be the moment Richardson dreamed of holding a copy of her own book and placing it on a shelf. All grown up, Richardson's head still stays in the fantasy world, fashioning worlds where the power of a star can be harnessed and used for time travel, flying is just as easy as walking here on earth – and her best friends are fairies. Her characters are dark and lost individuals, but readers' love for them will grow when they realize not everything is black and white. Richardson is represented by Rebecca Angus at Golden Wheat Literary.