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Product Description
Hell on earth.
That’s what it’s like for Luce to be apart from her fallen angel boyfriend, Daniel.
It took them an eternity to find one another, but now he has told her he must go away. Just long enough to hunt down the Outcasts—immortals who want to kill Luce. Daniel hides Luce at Shoreline, a school on the rocky California coast with unusually gifted students: Nephilim, the offspring of fallen angels and humans.
At Shoreline, Luce learns what the Shadows are, and how she can use them as windows to her previous lives. Yet the more Luce learns, the more she suspects that Daniel hasn’t told her everything. He’s hiding something—something dangerous.
What if Daniel’s version of the past isn’t actually true? What if Luce is really meant to be with someone else?
The second novel in the addictive FALLEN series . . . where love never dies.Amazon.com Review
Amazon.com Exclusive: Questions for Lauren Kate
Amazon.com: Luce and Daniel’s story is very romantic. What inspired you to write a love story between a human and an angel?
Lauren Kate: I’ve been writing love stories for as long as I’ve been writing. To me, the most complicated romances make the most interesting narratives, so I’m always looking for new obstacles to throw in my lovers’ paths. When I was getting my masters degree in fiction, I was studying biblical narratives and came across a line in Genesis (6:1-4), which describes a group of angels who fell in love with mortal women. Putting this reference together with a mention in Isaiah and another in Palsm 82, biblical scholars conclude that these angels were actually cast out of Heaven for their lust. Which means–you could say–that these angels chose love over Heaven. I found this to be an endlessly interesting set up for an incredibly complicated romance. I started thinking about what kind of mortal girl it would take to attract an angel’s attention. And what it would be like for her to find herself in this position. What kind of baggage would an angel have? What would her very over-protective parents think? From there, this whole world unfurled in my head with fallen angels, demons, reincarnation, and the war between good and evil all battling for a piece of the action.
Amazon.com: We’ve been wondering about the “mechanics” of Luce and Daniel’s story (for lack of a better word). Does Daniel age? Or does he stay seventeen forever (while Luce grows older)? And with that said, what does he do while Luce is growing up in each of her lives? What was he doing before he met Luce in this life?
Kate: What’s important about angels is not their bodies but their souls. In their purest forms, they’re actually genderless, but for my story to work–for the angels to come down to earth and interact with mortals–they all assume human bodies and attach themselves to human genders. Daniel is eternal and will live on forever, but the body Luce sees him in (gorgeous as it is) is really just a shell for the soul that she loves. There’s not the feeling of a ticking clock in the background as there might be with, say, a vampire story. Right now I’m writing Passion, the prequel where we’ll see Luce and Daniel in a dozen other lifetimes, so I’m exploring a lot of these mechanics (a great word for it, by the way) between the angel’s bodies and souls.
The way Daniel occupies himself in between Luces varies from life to life. His soul is least at rest just after she’s died, before she’s incarnated into another life–when she is “in between.” During her lives, even when he isn’t with her, he is always aware of her age, what she’s going through, how she’s doing. He has a sort of internal Lucinda clock. Sometimes he meets her as a child, sometimes he tries to stay away from her as long as possible, to give her as much of a life outside of him as he can. In the years leading up to the life where they meet at Sword and Cross, Daniel was living on Skid Row in Los Angeles.
Amazon.com: Fallen and Torment talk a lot about the history of Heaven and Hell, the different classes of Angels, and the rules of human-angel interaction. Obviously these themes are explored heavily in religious texts, but were there other sources that informed your story?
Kate:It’s interesting because there is actually very little in the Bible about angels–a few mentions in the Old Testament, a few more in the new. And the mentions that we do have are often vague or contradictory. Most of what we think of when we think of angels today comes from secular or cultural contexts. Seventy-five percent of it might have come from Milton alone. I worked with a biblical scholar at UC Davis who pointed me toward some apocryphal texts (books written during the same as the bible, but which were not included in the book when the canon was closed). Books like Enoch 1-3 and the Dead Sea Scrolls are chock full of angel references. I also read a trilogy on Satan and a book called the A History of Heaven both by Jeffrey Burton Russell, as well as a great book by Harold Bloom called Omens of the Millennium.
I got so engrossed in all of the research I did for Fallen that I had a hard time knowing when to stop reading and when to start writing. I had to realize that it was okay for me to pick and choose things from various accounts, to look past contradictions, and to come up with my own angel mythology. That’s what Milton did, after all!
Amazon.com: What is Cam’s deal? We’re not convinced that he’s totally evil–in Fallen, he seemed to be trying to protect Luce by keeping her away from Daniel, and in Torment he and Daniel reach a mysterious truce, again to protect Luce. Will we be seeing more of him in book 3?
Kate:Speaking of Milton, isn’t it fascinating that Satan is the most interesting character in Paradise Lost? From the start of this series, I have wanted to test the boundaries between what is “good” and what is “evil.” How and when do those terms get applied? Are they black and white or is there some flexibility along the spectrum? Obviously it’s much more interesting if Heaven and Hell/good and evil work as binaries: opposites that orbit each other and are pulled toward each other with a mutual gravitation. We see that at the end of Fallen and in Torment with Daniel and Cam’s truce. The idea that good and evil rely on each other is as old as the oldest dualistic religion, Zoroastrianism (on whose shoulders both Judaism and Christianity stood).
So yes, there is more to Cam than pure evil! (Especially since his character–the charming side of his character anyway–was based loosely on my husband.) We’ll see a lot of him in Passion and will even begin to understand how he got where he is today.
Amazon.com: Can you tell us a little bit about book 3? Will we find out more about Luce and Daniel’s past lives?
Kate:Passion is going to be the craziest, coolest book I’ve ever written! I’m halfway through the first draft right now and it is so rewarding to finally get to delve into Luce and Daniel’s past lives together. The history these two share is the stuff of epics, and I am learning so many new things about them as I write. For any reader out there feeling tortured by the teasing hints of so many thrilling past lives: Passion is your book! Everything–well, almost everything–will be illuminated.
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{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }
I’ve bought a kindle DX expecting to buy books cheaper but I see that offen te Kindle edition of a book is more expensive than the Hardcover edition.
Unthinkable.
Rating: 3 / 5
Knowing that yesterday was the release date for the 2nd book in this series, one I have been waiting on since the debut of the 1st book, I couldn’t help but rush from afternoon classes to Borders to get my copy. I even missed two study sessions, not being able to wait another second to get my hands on this book. But what a disappointment it was. Not that the book didn’t have it’s good moments, but I expected sooo much more after that first book. I guess I right off the back knew I gonna have some problems with this book because of my dislike for love triangles. Not only are they just typical, but the concept itself irks the heck out me.. Its just something about an author painting this lovely portrait of a perfect everlasting love between two people only to destroy the painting by splashing it with these dark distracting colors. Because thats all the 3rd person in the love story ever is, a distraction (ie Jacob from Twilight). They distract the readers from fully being able to become familiar with, understand, and appreciate the love the author has created between the two characters.
And also the damsel in distress thing got played out with Bella Swan as well. I honestly thought Luce would be different and a lot wiser as far as decision making but I guess that was hoping for too much.. I’d go a lot further into detail, but because the book is so fresh I don’t want to give away too much.. maybe in a week or two when I see what others think as well.. Plus I’m at work and don’t have much time
But all and all this book let me down! I hope next summer’s, Passion, will bring the story back together for me.
Rating: 3 / 5
I can sum up how Tormented by Lauren Kate has left me feeling in one word–frustrated. In Torment we again follow Luce, a supposed normal girl, in a relationship with a once very important, but now fallen angel, Daniel. Luce and Daniel are cursed to love one another throughout time, but who never actually get to be together–every time a reincarnate Luce meets up with her long lost love, Daniel, and things get a little physical, Luce spontaneously combusts and then the whole cycle repeats. We still didn’t learn what it is exactly about their relationship that makes it so forbidden. It can’t simply be the fact that Luce is a human woman and Daniel is an angel because Shoreline, a school of Nephilium, the offspring of such unions, where Daniel and his demon counterpart decide to hide Luce from all of the various sects of fallen angels interested in her, is proof of some such successful inter-species relationships. Not to mention the fact that by the end of the book we still don’t understand what Luce and Daniel see in one another–they hardly spend any time together at all except to fight and make out. Even Luce doesn’t understand their relationship. She feels an intense attraction to him and continues to profess that she loves him, all the while questioning why she feels that way, as she explores her feelings for a Nephilium friend, Miles. We also don’t understand why so many fallen angels are after Luce. I’ve been left with so many unanswered questions that although I am extremely frustrated, I have no choice to keep reading. I’m keeping my fingers crossed that Passion holds the answers I seek.
Rating: 3 / 5
Unfortunately, I have to agree with most of the reviews and say that Torment left me disappointed. So much so, that I’m actually taking the time to write a review in the hope that I can join the other reviews and urging the author to save the storyline that has so much potential. Unlike Fallen which was an experience similar to an adrenaline rush, the story line of Torment was very slow and drawn out and I found it hard to keep focus and had to convince myself at times that something exciting was going to happen on the next page but unfortunately, I didn’t find that excitement until the last 2 chapters of the book. I’m definitely excited to read the next book but I really hope that flare and excitement that I found in Fallen returns. I know that Torment set the scene for a lot of events that will take place in the subsequent books but it was almost agonizing to read (at times) not to mention the lack of interaction between Luce and Daniel….
Rating: 3 / 5
I have been so excited for this book to come out. Unfortunately, it was not as good as I was expecting it to be. I loved the first book so much, and could barely put it down. With Torment I kept hoping I would get to that point, but never did. There are still so many unanswered questions, and I don’t feel that this book moved the story along for us at all.
Spoiler Alert: I hated how Daniel acted in this book. He was closed off, demanding, and domineering. I got so fed up with him I was ready for her to kiss Miles way before it even happened. Plus, Cam is one of my favorite characters, and definitely one of the most interesting. He was hardly in this book at all!
The ending was the best part of this book and is a great setup for the next. I still have high hopes for the next book and will be getting it on day one. I’ll keep my fingers crossed that it’s everything I hoped this book would be.
Rating: 3 / 5