The final book in the New England-set trilogy that began with Dance Upon the Air and Heaven and Earth.
Setting: Three Sisters Island
Sensuality: 7
A stunningly beautiful, powerful witch who possesses the gift of Fire, Mia Devlin locked her heart away when Sam Logan rejected her youthful love and left Three Sisters Island. Eleven years later, Sam returns to the island to claim Mia and take over his family business, the Magick Inn. Passion still burns between them, but Mia refuses to trust the man who once tore her life apart, leaving her grieving and alone. It's imperative that they find a way to resolve their thorny, complicated relationship for time is running out and the deadline for breaking a centuries-old curse is near. Mia has the steadfast aid of her two sisters of the heart, powerful witches that rule Air and Earth, but without Sam's help, even Mia's powers may not be enough to keep her alive until the deadline. And unless Mia makes the right choice about her heart and Sam, evil may win in the final confrontation, destroying all their lives and Three Sisters Island as well.
Face the Fire is the third and last book in bestselling author Nora Roberts's trilogy of witches, magic, and an age-old curse that began with Dance upon the Air and Heaven and Earth. This novel boasts a vivid seaside setting, sympathetic characters, and enough details about the practice of magic to intrigue the most cynical of readers. This is Roberts at her best. Don't miss it. --Lois Faye Dyer
Customer Reviews:
Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 / 5.0
Face the Fire:
I enjoyed it very much, it was the last book of:
Nora Roberts (Three Sisters Island Trilogy)
Good Seller:
Item was exactly as described and was received in time frame it was promised in.
Great-but a disappointment:
This was the final book of the "sisters" trilogy. It was a good read-but didn't have the impact of the first and second stories. Still enjoyed it--just a little flat.
Skip This Book:
This is the last book of Three Sisters Island Trilogy Setting: Modern Times Maybe I am prejudiced since I read the first book and that Nell's story was my favorite-- therefore, I feel that my favorite character is Nell and I could not connect to Mia because in the back of my mind, I felt that the author favored Mia. I couldn't get into the story so I skipped a lot of the pages after hitting the half mark. And maybe even with my prejudices that if the story was really good that I would have rated... more info