The Poet and the Prophecy: Magic University Book Four

Riverdale Avenue

Heat Rating: Scorching
Word Count: 106,000
0 Ratings (0.0)

Kyle Wadsworth has mastered sex magic, dreamwalking, and even poetry in his years at Veritas. But in this conclusion to the Magic University series of new adult paranormal fantasy romance, Kyle begins his senior year full of doubt. Will the dire ancient prophecy he has been studying come true if Kyle cannot find true love? The signs of the Burning Days seem to be everywhere—odd storms, earthquakes, and people losing their magic—and though Kyle has many loving friends and eager acquaintances, he has no true love in sight. The only person in Kyle's heart is Frost, and the last time they laid eyes on each other, it didn't end well.

Frost has a troubled past and deep secrets. Kyle begins to hope, though, when it appears he and Frost will be in a class together. A poetry class. Maybe Frost will start to thaw after all, though Kyle has a long way to go from nemesis to lover. If the prophecy speaks true, our hero will need love to keep the world, his friends, and himself from losing magic forever.

"The Magic University books really need to be read all together to be understood. You should definitely grab all four books and get comfortable – you’re in for an exciting ride! The Poet and the Prophecy is a satisfying conclusion to the series, and one that adult Harry Potter fans will no doubt enjoy." —Lucy Felthouse, Seattle Post-Intelligencer

"I love that in The Poet and The Prophecy Kyle needs to draw on everything about himself to succeed, from his talent as a poet to his bisexuality. How often do bisexuals get to save the world in books? Kyle accomplishes things that a 'typical' straight hero would fail at, including the 'enemies to lovers' relationship we've all been waiting for since book one." –BookPost

"Tan has long been one of the foremost voices in writing and publishing erotic sci-fi and fantasy. With her New Adult paranormal romance Magic University series, Tan combines her favorite elements from the Harry Potter books with LGBT characters and eroticism. Her protagonist Kyle Wadsworth, studying at the secret magical university Veritas, learns to harness sex magic to combat sirens and prophecies alike. With Kyle starting out knowing less than Jon Snow, he experiences the kind of in-depth sexual apprenticeship that Anastasia Steele should have learned at the hands of Christian Grey." —Tor.com

"Very nice series of books that I look forward to rereading some day. The frequent description of 'Harry Potter for Adults' made me fear it would be totally derivative, but it really wasn't." —BookLikes

The Poet and the Prophecy: Magic University Book Four
0 Ratings (0.0)

The Poet and the Prophecy: Magic University Book Four

Riverdale Avenue

Heat Rating: Scorching
Word Count: 106,000
0 Ratings (0.0)
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Cover Art by Fox Estacado
Excerpt

Kyle still didn't know how the ritual sex they'd had two years ago had cursed Frost to shift to female every sunset and male with every dawn. All he knew is he couldn't get Frost off his mind. All attempts to forget him and move on had failed.

Frost plopped down at an empty table in the back and began devouring everything on the tray.
Kyle took a deep breath, got up to refill his drink, and then sat in the chair across from Frost. "You just made it before dinner closed," Kyle observed casually.

Frost merely nodded and then concentrated on eating again.

Kyle looked away. When he looked back, she was wiping her mouth on a napkin and looking at him, not quite a glare, but not a welcoming look, either.

They were the only two left in the room.

"We need to talk," Kyle said.

Frost had this way of speaking with jaw clenched, and yet all the words were sharply intelligible. Sharp as knives. As teeth. "Just because we've had sex all of twice—"

"Six!" Kyle spat, desperate to interrupt before she could get on a roll.

Frost blinked, as if Kyle had just coughed up a live kitten. "What?"

"Six," Kyle said in a softer voice, because he felt foolish for saying it now, but he couldn't help but notice that Frost leaned toward him, trying to hear. "I... I don't count it as... as twice. I... " I sound completely pathetic. "I count six times." At least.

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