![]() ![]() Is she vengeful? Malicious? Demoniacally possessed? Or just pleased? What the cover does do is force you to turn it and read its wonderful words within, as you are drawn into a story unlike any other, and you won’t be able to stop until you finish its last page. Like a work of art, the more you see of it, the more details are revealed and add to its overall complexity: whether it’s the future looking buildings under a silver sky, the giant robot holding a small science fiction-looking umbrella, or the little African girl with a look on her face that can be interpreted in a plethora of ways. Nicky Drayden’s debut novel, Prey of Gods is one of those covers that can pull you from across the room, as you hone in to inspect further wondering what’s going on here. ![]() Book covers have a way of catching your eye, whether it’s on an Amazon Kindle recommends page or your browsing in one of the last physical bastions of the dying printed word (AKA a bookstore). ![]()
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