



Flash Fire
The Extraordinaries, Book Two
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4.6 • 80 Ratings
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
First editions of the Flash Fire hardcover come with a reversible jacket!
Flash Fire is the explosive sequel to The Extraordinaries by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author TJ Klune!
Through bravery, charm, and an alarming amount of enthusiasm, Nick landed himself the superhero boyfriend of his dreams. Now instead of just writing stories about him, Nick actually gets to kiss him. On the mouth. A lot. But having a superhero boyfriend isn’t everything Nick thought it would be—he’s still struggling to make peace with his own lack of extraordinary powers.
When new Extraordinaries begin arriving in Nova City—siblings who can manipulate smoke and ice, a mysterious hero who can move objects with their mind, and a drag queen superhero with the best name and the most-sequined costume anyone has ever had—it’s up to Nick and his friends Seth, Gibby, and Jazz to determine who is virtuous and who is villainous.
And new Extraordinaries aren’t the only things coming to light. Long-held secrets and neglected truths are surfacing that challenge everything Nick knows about justice, family, and being extraordinary. Which is a lot to handle when Nick really just wants to finish his self-insert bakery AU fanfic.
Will it all come together in the end or will it all go down in flames?
At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
Customer Reviews
more cheesy than charming
the first book came off as charming, however the cringe level of book 2 was as nick would say, over 9000. there were moments when I felt like I wanted to turn my head and look away but i couldn’t because i’m in too deep. These characters would be better if they were all either seniors or starting college (18+). Pretty graphic descriptors for high schoolers. Really weird balance of them acting like they are grown ups, their parents controlling them, while also somehow simultaneously allowing them to do whatever they want whenever they want. it’s just unrealistic for a bunch of 16 year olds and it makes the character dynamic confusing. too much use of trendy gen z slang that is already quite outdated after only a couple years.