![]() I highly recommend reading this book to older teens and up. The end is clearly a set up for a third book in the series, but still is satisfying… for now. ![]() I really found myself caring about what happened to the characters and really rooting for a happy ending. The character development of Ali, Kovis, and even Kennan is extremely well done. I loved how the story unfolded, usually from Ali’s viewpoint, but occasionally from Kovis’s. It is also a story of overcoming abuse, coming out stronger than thought to be possible. ![]() Peggy Lee released it on the album Things Are Swingin in 1958. It was first released by Benny Goodman and His Orchestra in 1938. Lullaby blends excitement and romance to weave a story that draws you in and makes it hard to put down at night (I lied to myself so many times when I said “just one more chapter”). Lullaby in Rhythm by Peggy Lee was written by Clarence Profit, Benny Goodman, Edgar Sampson and Walter Hirsch and was first recorded by Benny Goodman in 1975. Meanwhile, Ali’s father is still after her and trying take over Wake Realm by controlling people in their sleep. Then the Council discovers she has powerful magic and decides to eliminate her in the Ninety-Eight. First she has to convince Kovis (and Kennan) that her story is true and she means them no harm. ![]() Ali the Sand Maiden has made it to Wake Realm, but all is not as simple as she expected it to be. ![]()
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