![]() ![]() I also loved the Hawthorne boys, as always. It’s also brilliant to see Avery go from a clever but relatively unambitious teen to an absolute beast of puzzles and game mastery, who manages to keep being a smart, altruistic, compassionate, and kind person even when she’s literally handed the world on a golden platter. Once you unravel one mystery it will lead to a dozen more. And there are mysteries to unravel (why Avery? what’s going on? is so and so really dead? is such and such a threat or a friend?) and the plot is like a nesting doll. But the billionaire also happens to have 4 dashing sons and a perchance for extremely complicated riddles and games. So the premise of the series (if you’re new here) is that Avery is a bit of a nobody and suddenly finds herself the sole inheritor of a billionaire’s fortune. ![]() See my reviews for The Inheritance Games (#1) and The Hawthorne Legacy (#2). There were reveals that were set up from book one. Imagine the organisation! The tying up all the loose threads! Impeccable. The skill it would take to wield this plot, handle all the numerous reveals, keep all the twists in order…my jaw is on the floor. As much as I enjoyed the reading of them, I also just want to gush over the craft as well. These books were all brilliant □□□ works of complicated, twisty genius. So I absolutely love the Inheritance Games trilogy and this finale did not disappoint. ![]()
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