I can confirm 'Crier's War' is part of a duology. The sequel 'Iron Heart' was released in 2020 and wraps up the story beautifully. What I appreciate about this pair is how the first book sets up this fascinating conflict between human rebels and mechanical beings called Automae, while the sequel delivers on all that buildup with explosive confrontations and emotional payoffs. The world expands considerably in 'Iron Heart', introducing new factions and locations that make the universe feel alive. We get to see more of the Automae society and how their creation myths intertwine with human history. The political maneuvering becomes more sophisticated, and the action scenes are choreographed with precision. Nina Varela writes fight sequences that actually feel visceral and dangerous. Character arcs reach satisfying conclusions, particularly for Sidekick, who transforms from a vengeful rebel to someone capable of nuance. The romance between the two leads avoids easy solutions, forcing them to confront their differences rather than magically overcoming them. The duology format keeps the pacing tight—no filler, just essential storytelling that leaves you satisfied yet wishing there was more in this universe.
I just finished 'Crier's War' last week and had to dig into this. It actually has a sequel titled 'Iron Heart' that completes the duology. The story doesn't end with the first book—it expands into a more intense political drama with higher stakes. The sequel dives deeper into the war between Automae and humans, exploring themes of rebellion and forbidden love. If you enjoyed the world-building in the first book, you'll love how everything gets more intricate in 'Iron Heart'. The characters develop significantly, especially Ayla and Crier, whose relationship becomes even more complex. The duology format works perfectly for this story, giving enough space to resolve all major plotlines without dragging it out unnecessarily.
For fans of 'Crier's War', the good news is there's a direct sequel called 'Iron Heart' that completes the story. This isn't one of those series that gets stretched into a trilogy unnecessarily—the two-book structure keeps the narrative lean and impactful. The sequel doubles down on everything that made the first book great: the tension between human and Automae societies, the slow-burn romance, and the philosophical questions about what makes someone truly alive. What stands out in 'Iron Heart' is how it escalates the consequences. Decisions made in the first book come back to haunt characters in unexpected ways. The action becomes more personal, with battles that aren't just about physical strength but ideological clashes. The mechanics of the Automae get explored in greater detail, revealing surprising vulnerabilities and strengths. The ending provides closure while leaving enough mysteries to make the world feel expansive. It's rare to find a duology where both books are equally strong, but this one sticks the landing. If you liked the sapphic romance and mechanical body horror elements of the first book, the sequel delivers even more.
2025-06-28 05:33:37
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The Carrero Contract (series book 3)
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CAMILLA WALTERS thought she had come to the end of the road when fate caught up with her. No where left to run or hide, on the verge of becoming fish food at the hands of drug runners she owed a lot of money to.
That was until fate brought her ALEXI, head of the family CARRERO - The unexpected hero who saved her ass and changed her life in one easy manouvre.
Who knew she would have to sign her soul over to the devil in a bid to stay alive and in doing so, lose her heart and mind in the process.
This is not your typical hearts and roses story - Let the games begin and the war commence.
This is book 7 in The Carrero Series, although you can read this without prior books. There are back story hints from previous books worked in, so this new trio can be read alone.
For a fuller understanding then start with The Carrero Effect .
This is the sequel to "Trio of Mates" (can be found on here) and is NOT a stand-alone book.
I felt as if I had just fallen asleep when flashes and fragments of dreams began to play through my mind. They are disjointed, speeding through my mind almost too fast to catch. There is Charlie holding two pups in her arms, the pack being attacked on the western front, Arya fallen to her knees sobbing in the middle of a battlefield, funeral pyres, me looking down at my pregnant stomach with Gael and Hakeem smiling down at me, whoops of victory, and wails of defeat. As the images flit through my mind, a voice enters the chaos. “A war of threes. Three deaths. Three victories. Three trios. Three losses. Betrayal. Birth. Death. Sorrow. Joy. Warn them, Meredith. Be prepared!”
For three years, Sierra Daniels has been scrubbing blood off the floors of The Crimson Cage, Las Vegas’s most brutal supernatural arena. Invisible… Obedient... Alive.
In a cruel world where werewolf gladiators are forced to fight to the death for the entertainment of the rich and powerful. Sierra stayed alive by keeping everything secret, her wolf, her past, and the bloodline she should have lost when her family died fifteen years ago. But when a forbidden medical exam reveals the truth, her anonymity is shattered. She's an unclaimed Luna with Royal Alpha blood.
Ryder Maddox, the arena’s undefeated champion, haunted by guilt, and just three fights from getting his freedom. He survived as a merciless weapon until he caught Sierra’s scent, and his wolf knew the one woman he was born to protect. His mate… His weakness… His next opponent.
The owner of The Crimson Cage, a billionaire, wants the ultimate spectacle: fated mates forced into a deadly fight, broadcast live to millions. The winner earns freedom; the loser dies beneath the lights. But Sierra’s blood holds a powerful secret that could spark a rebellion. Ryder’s past is tied to the night her world was destroyed. The arena’s owner might have been hunting her for years.
Now Ryder has to decide between the freedom he fought to earn, or accepting the fate Luna has tied to his soul. Sierra has to choose whether to keep hiding just to stay alive, or rise, as the royal her enemies failed to eliminate.
When the cage shuts and the crowd roars for blood, can a damaged Alpha and a captive Luna turn their mate's bond into a weapon of freedom? Or will their love become the arena’s final kill?
Eirlys Lythorne had known nothing but rejection and survival. Haunted by her dilemma, which was understood as a curse by everyone, even her mate, Ryker and bound by a past she cannot escape from, she isolated herself from everything.
But when fate forces them together once more, old wounds resurface. But as tensions rose within the pack, and with the threat of an enemy, both outside and within, Ryker must confront his guilt and Eirlys must find the strength to trust again.
With the fate of their world on the line, can they heal the scars of the past before it's too late? Or will rejection and revenge tear them apart forever?
More drama comes for Dominic and Triniti in this sequel. After getting rid of James, Dominic now has another enemy and it' someone far dangerous than Mr. Calligan alone. It's Triniti's father who is a legendary hunter. Having to leave Triniti, his twins and his pack behind, Dominic joins his father in Shreveport where he can tap into his vampire side before the hunter arrives. However, the hunter has many things planned out.... One of them is eliminating Dominic and Triniti altogether....
After the rising of humankind, creatures of the night were forced to fallback when they were almost faced with extinction, driving them into hiding. Many years have passed and a new creation emerged from death, roaming the new world with vague memories, trying to remember who she is. But little did she know her DNA was the key to end an ancient war, and a power source humans envied.
The death of Hesod in 'Crier''s War' sends shockwaves through the narrative, reshaping the political landscape and personal dynamics in ways that are both brutal and mesmerizing. As the patriarch of the sovereign House of Sovereign, his assassination isn''t just a loss—it''s a detonator. The book doesn''t shy away from the immediate chaos: alliances fracture like glass, and the Automa''s rule teeters on the edge of collapse. What''s fascinating is how his death becomes a catalyst for Crier''s evolution. Without Hesod''s oppressive control, she''s forced to confront the moral rot of her society head-on, questioning everything she was built to believe. The moment she kneels beside his corpse, you can almost hear the gears turning in her mechanical heart—this is the birth of her rebellion.
Then there''s Ayla, whose vengeance plot gets upended by Hesod''s death. She spent years dreaming of killing him herself, and now that the opportunity''s ripped away, her rage has nowhere to go. It''s like watching a storm with no landfall. Her entire identity was tied to that singular goal, and without it, she''s untethered. The book masterfully shows her pivoting from blind hatred to something more complex—especially when she realizes Crier might be the key to dismantling the system Hesod upheld. Their uneasy alliance post-murder is one of the most gripping parts of the story, charged with tension and reluctant understanding. The way their relationship twists around this shared void is storytelling at its finest.
Minor character deaths—like the human rebels picked off during raids—aren''t just background noise either. Each one tightens the screws on Ayla''s resolve, pushing her closer to extremes. There''s a particular scene where a fellow rebel dies mid-sentence, their blood splattering her face, that haunts the rest of the book. It''s these smaller losses that ground the high-stakes politics in raw, human cost. The narrative never lets you forget: every death, whether a sovereign or a foot soldier, sends ripples that drown someone new. By the end, you''re left with a world where grief is the only true ruler, and survival means learning to swim in its wake.