![]() ![]() Perhaps the most important thing is, though, that the book ends on a note that would have left this reviewer content not to come back to Jihoon and Miyoung. Enter discussions of family, more than a little romance, and mythology, then set it in Seoul, and you have a recipe for a fun read that should have YA enthusiasts hooked. Miyoung is, and she’s caught between what she wants to be - something of a merciful gumiho who only feeds off the energy of bad men, killing them slowly - and what her mother wants her to be. In fact, he looks more tricky than Miyoung does, but he’s not the gumiho at the heart of this story. From the pink-and-purple palette to the details of Miyoung’s tails and her name in Hangul on her school uniform, you can tell that this is a story about her - but Jihoon, her love interest and main character in his own right, is right there with a playful smile on his face. ![]() We’re not supposed to judge a book by its cover, but gosh, Wicked Fox looks pretty from the outset. By Cheryl Wassenaar 3 years ago Kat Cho’s debut novel will lure you in without any trouble, but it’s impressive that Wicked Fox could be a complete story without an already-planned sequel. ![]()
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