Children of memory
I loved this book.
I have multiple books I’m reading at any given time. Different formats mean, I am reading them at different times. Audiobooks - while driving or walking alone, e-books whenever I get time through out the day.
I use the e-library service of Helmet to read these books. I am also subscribed to Audible so I get one book per month. These have been the children of time series books since I started. Since I own these books, I don’t have an incentive to continue reading it, if I also have a audiobook available from the library. The library books are available for 14 days max. So there’s a time limit to those.
At least, that was the case with Children of ruin. Not so much with this one.
I borrowed This is how you lose the time war around the same time as I got this one. But I just could not put this book down!
Children of memory read like a horror book at times, this was a great mystery! A great mystery that felt like a time travel epic. I just had no clue what was happening. I had to know what was happening.
I was no way near what I thought was happening and what was actually happening, though it felt a bit of a let down when it was revealed what it was.
Adrian wrapped up the story nicely after that though.
The great trick of Children of Time has been repeated twice now - like the fast and the furious movies, where the villain from one movie becomes the hero in the next one. It feels like something similar is happening here.
We are at the very end though. The next book is that last one. I will miss it when it’s over.