![]() ![]() ![]() To top it off, something is in Black Elm, Darlington’s large and dark house and that something is freaking Alex out.įortunately, Alex, now in her second year at Yale, has a squad. ![]() ![]() is forcing her to work for him, and, despite being told to drop it, she’s determined to open a portal to Hell and rescue Darlington, her mentor and possible paramour. really didn’t prepare her academically for the Ivy League), her work for Lethe (the ghosts she can see are more aggressive than ever), her very scary ex-boss in L.A. There’s the usual challenge of trying to pass her classes (her background as a low level drug dealer in L. Alex (Galaxy) Stern, now the Virgil of Lethe, the house that monitors the use of magic by Yale’s famed secret societies, has a lot on her plate. Our story begins a few months after the literally spellbinding conclusion of Ninth House in which Darlington was sent to Hell by a now dead dean. But for those of you who have… here goes. Hell Bent is the second book in Leigh Bardugo’s Alex Stern series and will likely to confuse those who haven’t read the first. Have you read Ninth House? Because if not–and you’re a loon if you haven’t–this review is a waste of your time. ![]()
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