Honeymoon of the Dead by Tate Hallaway

Honeymoon of the Dead (Garnet Lacey, #5)

by Tate Hallaway

The latest in the bewitching series from the author of Dead if I Do

In wintry Wisconsin, occult bookseller-and witch-Garnet Lacey isn't immune to the cold. But even though her new vampire husband doesn't actually have a pulse, love will keep them warm-if the honeymoon doesn't drive them apart.

Thanks to a vengeful frost demon, instead of a gothic honeymoon in Transylvania, Garnet and Sebastian are stuck in exotic Minneapolis, Minnesota. And with gods and goddesses running amok all over town, Garnet can't seem to find much quality time for her new hubby...

Reviewed by Berls on

4 of 5 stars

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Oops, I did it again! I finished a book, moved on to the next and never marked it on Goodreads or wrote my review :/ Thankfully, I remember this book very clearly because it was the end of the series and a great way to go out.

First of all, it was really funny. Probably the funniest of the series - because it was just so out there. Garnet and Sebastian are supposed to be on their way to Europe for their honeymoon and instead she sees a goddess on the plane wings, freaks out (understandably) and she and Sebastian end up getting off the plane and questioned for hours by the FBI/CIA/I forget exactly which acronym was in play.

I really enjoyed seeing the ghost of xmas past so to speak... Garnet had to face who she once was a realize she wasn't actually the best person. She also has to come to grips with her warring goddesses before they tear her apart - and again, some of this means accepting who she is and which goddess fits her best.

There's also some secret society craziness and Sebastian getting arrested over his not quite legitimate papers. Oh and the best scene involving a cat ever (and I'm a dog person!).

Anyway loved it, thought it was a great way to end the series and I'm so glad Amanda Ronconi was narrating. I look forward to jumping into more series by Tate Hallaway now that I've read and loved this one!

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 2 September, 2018: Finished reading
  • 2 September, 2018: Reviewed