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Death Paperback – November 11, 2021
Laura Thalassa (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
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Death.
The day Death comes to Lazarus Gaumond’s town and kills everyone in one fell swoop, the last thing he expects to see is a woman left alive and standing. But Lazarus has her own extraordinary gift: she cannot be killed—not by humans, not by the elements, not by Death himself.
She is the one soul Death doesn’t recognize. The one soul he cannot pry free from her flesh. Nor can he ignore the unsettling desire he has for her. Take her. He wants to, desperately. And the longer she tries to stop him from his killing spree, the stronger the desire becomes.
When Lazarus crosses paths with the three other horsemen, an unthinkable situation leads to a terrible deal: seduce Death, save the world. A hopeless task, made all the worse by the bad blood between her and Thanatos. But Death’s attraction to her is undeniable, and try though she might, Lazarus cannot stay away from that ancient, beautiful being and his dark embrace.
The end is here. Humankind is set to perish, and not even the horsemen can stop Death from fulfilling his final task.
Only Lazarus can.
- Print length500 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateNovember 11, 2021
- Dimensions5.25 x 1.25 x 8 inches
- ISBN-101942662300
- ISBN-13978-1942662303
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Product details
- Publisher : Lavabrook Publishing, LLC (November 11, 2021)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 500 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1942662300
- ISBN-13 : 978-1942662303
- Item Weight : 1.21 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.25 x 1.25 x 8 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #65,803 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,239 in Folklore (Books)
- #1,508 in Dark Fantasy
- #3,339 in Romantic Fantasy (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Found in the forest when she was young, Laura Thalassa was raised by fairies, kidnapped by werewolves, and given over to vampires as repayment for a hundred year debt. She’s been brought back to life twice, and, with a single kiss, she woke her true love from eternal sleep. She now lives happily ever after with her undead prince in a castle in the woods.
… or something like that anyway.
When not writing, Laura can be found scarfing down guacamole, hoarding chocolate for the apocalypse, or curled up on the couch with a good book.
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Top reviews from the United States
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After finishing Famine, I had a feeling Death would be my favorite horseman based on the following:
• brooding ✓
• sarcastic ✓
• dark-haired ✓
• he has freaking wings ✓
Well, I was correct. Death was everything I wanted and more. His character was not what I expected based on the interactions with his brothers in the previous books. He is stubborn as all hell though, even more so than his brothers. "Duty is duty" is his motto. Yet at the same time, he's also playful and a hopeless romantic, which I did not expect.
“You and I are fated to endure one another," the horseman says softly as he moves towards me.
The heroine, Lazarus, is also different than any of the other heroines from previous books. She's the complete opposite of Death, literally. She is strong, caring, brave and determined as hell. She knows what his mission is and it still doesn't stop her from falling for him.
I touch Death’s face. “And you’re everything I thought I shouldn’t have.”
I absolutely loved their dynamic and how well they complemented each other. Their relationship together was a definite slow burn. But the one thing they both have in common is duty; unfortunately their end goals are in contrast to each other’s. Their passion for each other on the other hand, is equal; I loved their chemistry.
My love for you is eternal and unfaltering, Lazarus. Do not doubt that. Stars will form and die, and what I feel for you will remain undimmed."
The ending of this book had me in tears, just because it was such a beautiful way to end this amazing series; even if I was extremely stressed out during most of part III. We got to see the brothers work together in this and updates on their lives.
“I am death," he translates, "and end to all beginnings, a beginning to all ends."
*ARC provided in exchange for an honest review*
The heroines spend most of the books crying, begging, arguing and at times yelling at the hero. The hero kills without remorse and treats the heroines with mockery or cruelty. Not sure how they ever end up in love. especially in some cases since the hero has killed or slaughtered the heroines entire family and or friends within days of meeting.
I did like how death and laz met. I did like his casual attempts to kill her in the beginning as weird as that sounds. lol. it was very gamma hero for me and I loved it. But soon the story went straight for both characters lusting after one another with no rhyme or reason for the attraction. definitely not from laz's perspective. she was gagging for him two days after finding her infant and toddler nieces and nephews killed. that was hard to wrap my head around.
anyway, nothing new happens comparative to the other books. there's no true dialogue or story action to progress the plot outside convincing the hero not to kill off the world. which doesnt make for great storytelling in this instance so you end up with long scenes of the two characters riding through town and people dying. I did love the brothers when they were on scene. wish we had gotten interaction with laz and their wives to add more "color" to round out the story or give it some pizazz because those scenes were really the stand out parts of this.
when its just death and laz together saying "dont kill people" "I must, its my duty" you dont really want to do anything but skim
Death and Lazarus are beautifully constructed characters—both have strong convictions and know a long life of loneliness.
I definitely cried toward the end, not out of sadness, but because it was just so beautiful to see the embodiment of Death express such deep emotions.
I would give this 10 stars if I could, and if it’s not obvious at this point I highly recommend picking up this series.
Top reviews from other countries

There was also the authors very odd choice to not include any descriptive detail within this book. The lack of description for surroundings and world building isn’t unusual for this author but there was none at all. This is the second of the four books to be set within North America, this time the USA although quite frankly asides from the town names at the start of each chapter, it could have been set absolutely anywhere. Even the main character is not described at all. I read on Instagram that this was a deliberate choice of the author so people would imagine Lazarus as they wished but it was just odd. We don’t know her age, her height, eye colour, hair colour, hair type, nothing. Instead of being able to imagine her as I wish I found instead she was just a blurry figure instead of a well formed character because I had literally nothing to go on about her appearance. We’ve had a Canadian, an Israeli and a Brazilian heroine in the last three books so I get the author didn’t want to be accused of not representing certain races or nationalities in her books but instead we just get this vague impression of a character rather than a well rounded individual. It’s the job of an author to create clear characters and unfortunately this decision meant that the main character lacked for me.
I liked how we got to see the other three horsemen again and it did have the perfect ending. Overall the book was fine but it wasn’t as good as I wanted it to be and it wasn’t my favourite of the series.

When she crosses paths with the three other horsemen they agree upon a terrible deal:
“Seduce death. Save The World”
The end is here. Humankind is set to perish, and not even the horsemen can stop Death.
--------------------
Year 26 of The Horsemen.
Okay this was a good one, Death and The Woman who can’t die.
I found this to be the best of the series.
I thought that Lazarus was a great FMC and Death, clueless as his brothers, maybe more so, was wonderful. I enjoyed Death’s character development even from the get go he was falling for her and referred to Lazarus as “Kismet” from practically their first meeting.
I found the part where Death revives a soul both saddening but comforting as I like to think those who have passed before us are now happy and fully at peace.
This was a great read and a brilliant end to the series.
4 stars

SPOILER: the epilogue got to me and i would have rather not have read about their death even if it was when they were old. i know it's strange as i really enjoyed the ending but the epilogue set decades into the future about their death i didnt enjoy for some reason/ made me sad even though they lived a full life. the ).5 star was knocked off due to the epilogue, it wasnt necessary a badly written one or to most people sad but to me it was :(.

Anyway overall I enjoyed the quadrilogy and it's a great idea but the ending especially was not of equal strength to the previous books. Overall for all the books I'd give it a 3/5

I adored Death and his sweet but dark ways but for me it was Lazarus that stole the show. I loved her fight and all of her up and down emotions, seriously well written and thought out character.
I am sad that this is the end of what had been a spectacular series (one that I stumbled across because this really isn’t my genre as a rule) but I also look forward to revisiting the horsemen in the future. Fabulous, absolutely fabulous