
And Liv loves a good mystery, or puzzle, one that she has to solve. The realistic dreams and other things really have her attention. But her curiosity wins out and she joins in. Grayson, and one of the other boys, named Henry, both kind of try to talk Liv out of joining them. Turns out Anabel wasn't what they needed. The "game" had to deal with raising a demon, and one of the caveats was that one of the participants had to be a virgin. A game they started with a girl named Anabel, who has since moved away. They want her to help them out with a game they started about a year ago. Soon the boys have a proposition for Liv. And the next day when she sees all the boys at school, it is as if they remember the dream too. This dream seems to be more real feeling though. Of course she knows she is just dreaming, and she's always had pretty vivid dreams that she can remember. As well as some other boys that go to her school. Later that night she runs into Grayson in her dreams. When Liv makes a mess on her clothes, she ends up borrowing a sweatshirt from Grayson. And the night they first meet at a dinner, it seems that they are going to be moving to live in the same house together.

They both go to the school where Liv and Mia will be able to go now. He has twins, Grayson and Florence who are a little older than Liv. The reason? Their mother seems to have fallen in love. When they arrive they find out that the little cottage they'd been looking forward to living in has been replaced with an apartment in town. The book begins with the current move to London. Their mother travels for her job a lot, and so they have lived in many different places. Her mother and father are divorced, and she has a younger sister named Mia.

The main character in this book is Liv, short for Olivia. But the only bad thing about that, is that now I have to wait even longer than I thought for the next book in the series to be published I guess, and I LOVED this one! I was a huge fan of the Ruby Red trilogy, and so was very excited to see this come available on Edelweiss. For some reason I thought it was going to be published in January, so I read it earlier than I probably had to.

First, thanks to Henry Holt and Company Books for Young Readers, as well as Edelweiss for allowing me to read an e-galley of this back in December.
