Legacy of Light by Sarah Raughley
- The Wicked Reader
- Nov 12, 2018
- 2 min read

Author: Sarah Raughley
Publisher: Simon Pulse
Date: December 4, 2018
Pages: 512
Format: ARC
My Rating: ⭐⭐⭐1/2
Purchase Links: [Chapters/Indigo] [Amazon]
Goodreads Synopsis:
The world is in chaos. After Saul’s strike on Oslo—one seemingly led by Maia herself—the Effigies’ reputation is in shambles. Now they’re being hunted by nations across the globe, grouped in with the very terrorists they’ve been trying to stop. With Maia’s resurrected twin, June, carrying out vicious attacks across the world, everyone believes Maia is a killer. Belle has gone rogue, Chae Rin and Lake have disappeared, and the Sect is being dismantled and replaced by a terrifying new world order helmed by Blackwell. As for Saul, his ultimate plan still remains a mystery. And Maia? No one has seen or heard from her in weeks. It’s all somehow connected—Saul, Phantoms, the Effigies, everything. But if the Effigies can’t put the pieces together soon, there may not be much left of the world they’ve fought so desperately to save.
My Review:
*Thank you Simon and Schuster for sending me an ARC of Legacy of Light by Sarah Raughley for an honest review.*
Legacy of Light is the third and final book in the Effigies series and it did not disappoint.
I did not re-read the first two books in the series before starting but I would recommend doing just that. I had a bit of a tough time trying to remember the events that had occurred and even some characters. Legacy of Light is over 500 pages and I did not expect that. I feel that it would have been more condensed by removing some of the unnecessary twists and shortening the battle scenes, maybe even removing some. I had felt the same with Siege of Storm (book two) where there was too much excess writing.
That being said it was still very enjoyable. It was filled with action, thrilling suspense and most importantly answers! We get a lot of questions answered in this book, especially about the beginning of the Effigies and how it all began. I can say that I am satisfied. Overall it was an enjoyable read and a great conclusion to the Effigies trilogy.
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