![]() She warns Fenella that this will involve terrible choices, but Fenella doesn’t care. The queen figures out that to break the spell, Fenella needs to complete three tasks of deliberate destruction in the mortal realm. There’s a spell upon her, cast by Padraig, the one who cursed her family. Now, Fenella just wants to be allowed to die.įenella goes to the faerie queen, begging to be allowed to die. When Lucy broke the family curse, she didn’t break the enchantment placed on Fenella. ![]() Fenella also has been unable to die for all those centuries, having to watch each of her daughters and granddaughters be tormented in turn. In Impossible, we learned about the family curse on Lucy Scarborough and all of her female line right back to her ancestor, Fenella Scarborough, who rejected an Elfin Knight and then was cursed. And though technically you can read it without having read the others, it pulls together some threads from both Impossible and Extraordinary, so I’m happy with my choice to read them in order. Unthinkable is billed as a “Companion” to Impossible. ![]() ![]() ![]() So together they gave my vacation a memory of some Extraordinary reading time! After I read Impossible, by Nancy Werlin, on the way to vacation in Oregon, I made sure I went to Powell’s books to find copies of Extraordinary and Unthinkable to read as well. ![]()
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