![]() ![]() I think, had I known that I’d not have looked twice and moved on straight away – I am so glad that I didn’t as I really had a blast reading The Man who Married Death, but I have been at a bit of a loss on how to review it. What I didn’t realise however, is that this is a collection of poetry. The synopsis sounded like it was going to be a horror story that was right up my street. ![]() When browsing NetGalley for a book to read, this one jumped out at me. ![]() My thanks go to NetGalley and the author, Amy Langevin for the copy of this book and for my first auto-approval I received a copy of The Man who Married Death via NetGalley in return for and honest review. ![]() Manipulated like a puppet, Zylen becomes entangled in Death’s countless affairs and finds himself continuously washing blood off his hands as his life, and everyone in it, descends into a whirlwind of mania and slaughter. Death accepts Zylen’s heart and takes up partial residence in his being, which allows Death to affect the tangible realm at whim. Zylen LaRocque, a twenty-eight-year-old depressive, arranges to be taken by Death, but his suicide fails, and he ends up proposing to the supernatural entity instead. ![]()
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