"I'd always thought of her as a faraway star, glinting distantly, illuminating just a little bit of my darkness with her unreachable light. And in an instant, I realise that I've been wrong. She's as immediate as the morning sun: blazing, and bright, and burning that long night out of all existence." _____ A re-telling of "Starlight" from Henry's perspective. (You DO NOT have to read "Starlight" first to understand this book - it has the same plot, just told from a different point of view.) _____
6 parts