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[57O]⇒ [PDF] Gratis Moonbreeze The Dragonian Series Book 4 eBook Adrienne Woods Joemel Requezza

Moonbreeze The Dragonian Series Book 4 eBook Adrienne Woods Joemel Requezza



Download As PDF : Moonbreeze The Dragonian Series Book 4 eBook Adrienne Woods Joemel Requezza

Download PDF  Moonbreeze The Dragonian Series Book 4 eBook Adrienne Woods Joemel Requezza

The life of a star-studded royal has not been kind to eighteen year-old Elena Watkins. With a Council breathing down her neck and a dragon that refuses to accept her as her rider, she must convince everyone that she is ready to rule Paegeia like her parents before her. But she has made a promise to her father King Albert, that she will not go looking for him and free the people of Etan. Elena has promised to never truly fulfil her destiny.

However, situations out of her control will soon force her to confront herself and the evil that seeks to destroy her. Elena must look inside herself to discover if she can defeat the approaching darkness, be accepted by the people of Paegeia, bring her dragon back to light and fulfill the destiny written in their stars.


Moonbreeze The Dragonian Series Book 4 eBook Adrienne Woods Joemel Requezza

First of all, I have enjoyed reading this series so far. It is a great idea, and I am so thankful to Adrienne Woods for creating a world that I can escape to when the humdrum of life becomes annoyingly...well...humdrum. I am always a little sad to finish a Dragnonian book, and when the series ends I will miss it.

My favorite part about the story is Blake, which is embarrassing. I am a grown woman and a dark, angry, fit-throwing teenage boy (who happens to double as a bad-a*** dragon) should not be my favorite part about a book. But it is. I also like when the author explores Elena's character growth (even though most of the time she has tunnel vision, but I have to remind myself that she is young), especially when she becomes super BA and claims the Rubicon in the arena. It took FOREVER getting there, and not to mention there were so many side plots and twists e.g., Elena suddenly becoming a dragon (which threatened to derail everyone's accurate predictions of Elena's true identity and who she was to Blake). The whole Cara thing was so long, but in the end worth it. That moment in the arena––when she finally ascended and made Blake yield––it gave me goosebumps. I remember reaching across the couch to give my very confused and very lost husband a hundred's worth of high fives and fist bumps; that was the level of my excitement.

Elena had finally ascended.
She had kinda met her true father.
She had CLAIMED THE RUBICON!!!

The wait was over!

Or so I'd thought...

First I had to wait for the next installment to be published. Then the author postponed the release date. I was bummed, but I understood. That being said, I think the author was right to go with her gut and push the date back. Still, I felt that the writing seemed rushed and the plot forced into a stilted awkwardness just so that the dysfunctional relationship between Elena and Blake could continue to flourish way past it's expiration date. I know that every girl loves the tug-and-pull of uncertainty when love is just an inclination and our fancy is perpetuated by the hope to tame that ever-elusive-bad-boy, but there is a point where it pushes past dramatic, cycles into something repetitive, and solidifies into an entity that is both complacent and unconvincing.

I don't want that.

I want the protagonist's relationship to have a balance between extraordinary and believable. I also don't want to be pushed into thinking the main female character couldn't even figure her way out of a box if she needed to.

It also seemed that there were a lot more grammatical errors this time (of course, I am no expert). Whole words were missing, and I'd have to guess what the author left out. I have also noticed that whenever there are tons of characters in a scene talking or planning amongst themselves, pronouns were tossed around the page like there is only one boy and one girl apart of the context. It is sometimes confusing and disruptive (even more so when we've just been introduced to a flock of new characters), and I think it would be nice if those parts could have a bit more clarity.

Overall––I am hoping in that last book I won't have to deal with Elena's insecurities, especially about Blake. Some serious stuff went down in Moonbreeze, so I'd like to see Elena grow into the person she was meant to be. I don't want the writing to use Blake as a fallback to keep reader's interest either. Ultimately, if I have to spend around 700 pages reading about the Blake/dent/"are his affections real" arc, I think I will vomit.

In the end, this series has so much potential. It really is one of my favorites. I hope that in the last book wherever the author decides to take it, it goes there naturally. Moonbreeze wasn't bad. I just felt it could have been better.

Product details

  • File Size 5474 KB
  • Print Length 552 pages
  • Simultaneous Device Usage Unlimited
  • Publisher Fire Quill Publishing (October 15, 2015)
  • Publication Date October 15, 2015
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B016QDMGSI

Read  Moonbreeze The Dragonian Series Book 4 eBook Adrienne Woods Joemel Requezza

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Moonbreeze The Dragonian Series Book 4 eBook Adrienne Woods Joemel Requezza Reviews


God, I'm so mad at this author. I can't lie. I HATE Elena. And I hate having to listen to every stupid selfish thought that comes to her head. It's worse than Facebook. Wah, wah, wah "I've had such a hard life, no one understands me, I'm so social, everything's so hard, you don't know what I've been through." GROW UP! I want to scream that the entire book. And then she gets gang-raped. Like what the hell, Adrienne Woods???

I've read A LOT of books with really bad circumstances in them and the author still manages to create a main character that you want to root for and that you can relate to. Elena isn't one of those MC's.

She was selfish and whiny before this book, but now it's absolutely unbearable to read Elena's thoughts. It's so tedious that I can't go on in the book, I give up. I can't even finish.

This is literally one of those books you keep reading hoping it will get better and never does. The author could have done so many things with this story and she chose to massacre all of her characters and create a no win for the reader. The worst part is I can't even sympathize with or feel sorry for Elena. And it's not because I don't understand a little bit about what she's going through, because I can from personal experience even. It's because NO ONE needs or wants to read two hundred pages of someone's thought vomit about hatred and all the lies they believe because they're extremely STUPID to begin with. BOOOOOOOOO, Adrienne Woods. This was a worthwhile series and you murdered it. You're character needs a spanking.
I'll start with the fact that the story line is pretty good. This is the third book that I have bought in the series because I love the character development. But there were elements in Moonbreeze that could have been at lot better or left completely out. Trying to deal with the issue of rape is a tough one and usually falls flat as it certainly did in this case. But what really got to me was the fact that I paid money for a book that read like a first draft. The further in, the worse the editing. I mean come on, the chapter number is forty, not fourty. There were unfinished sentences that were unacceptably hard to follow. I would expect this from a first time author who wrote a freebie, not the fourth book in a series like this.
First of all, I have enjoyed reading this series so far. It is a great idea, and I am so thankful to Adrienne Woods for creating a world that I can escape to when the humdrum of life becomes annoyingly...well...humdrum. I am always a little sad to finish a Dragnonian book, and when the series ends I will miss it.

My favorite part about the story is Blake, which is embarrassing. I am a grown woman and a dark, angry, fit-throwing teenage boy (who happens to double as a bad-a*** dragon) should not be my favorite part about a book. But it is. I also like when the author explores Elena's character growth (even though most of the time she has tunnel vision, but I have to remind myself that she is young), especially when she becomes super BA and claims the Rubicon in the arena. It took FOREVER getting there, and not to mention there were so many side plots and twists e.g., Elena suddenly becoming a dragon (which threatened to derail everyone's accurate predictions of Elena's true identity and who she was to Blake). The whole Cara thing was so long, but in the end worth it. That moment in the arena––when she finally ascended and made Blake yield––it gave me goosebumps. I remember reaching across the couch to give my very confused and very lost husband a hundred's worth of high fives and fist bumps; that was the level of my excitement.

Elena had finally ascended.
She had kinda met her true father.
She had CLAIMED THE RUBICON!!!

The wait was over!

Or so I'd thought...

First I had to wait for the next installment to be published. Then the author postponed the release date. I was bummed, but I understood. That being said, I think the author was right to go with her gut and push the date back. Still, I felt that the writing seemed rushed and the plot forced into a stilted awkwardness just so that the dysfunctional relationship between Elena and Blake could continue to flourish way past it's expiration date. I know that every girl loves the tug-and-pull of uncertainty when love is just an inclination and our fancy is perpetuated by the hope to tame that ever-elusive-bad-boy, but there is a point where it pushes past dramatic, cycles into something repetitive, and solidifies into an entity that is both complacent and unconvincing.

I don't want that.

I want the protagonist's relationship to have a balance between extraordinary and believable. I also don't want to be pushed into thinking the main female character couldn't even figure her way out of a box if she needed to.

It also seemed that there were a lot more grammatical errors this time (of course, I am no expert). Whole words were missing, and I'd have to guess what the author left out. I have also noticed that whenever there are tons of characters in a scene talking or planning amongst themselves, pronouns were tossed around the page like there is only one boy and one girl apart of the context. It is sometimes confusing and disruptive (even more so when we've just been introduced to a flock of new characters), and I think it would be nice if those parts could have a bit more clarity.

Overall––I am hoping in that last book I won't have to deal with Elena's insecurities, especially about Blake. Some serious stuff went down in Moonbreeze, so I'd like to see Elena grow into the person she was meant to be. I don't want the writing to use Blake as a fallback to keep reader's interest either. Ultimately, if I have to spend around 700 pages reading about the Blake/dent/"are his affections real" arc, I think I will vomit.

In the end, this series has so much potential. It really is one of my favorites. I hope that in the last book wherever the author decides to take it, it goes there naturally. Moonbreeze wasn't bad. I just felt it could have been better.
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