Fire of a Dragon
Fallen Immortals • Book 3
by Alisa Woods
Why You'll Love This
He has to seduce her to save the world — but falling for her might destroy him faster than the curse already is.
- Great if you want: paranormal romance with real emotional stakes and a tortured hero
- The experience: fast-paced and emotionally charged with a steady romantic tension throughout
- The writing: Woods keeps the conflict internal and external simultaneously — rarely lets up
- Skip if: you haven't started the series — book one is the right entry point
About This Book
A dying dragon prince. A treaty that holds two worlds apart. A woman who was never supposed to matter. Fire of a Dragon drops readers into a Seattle where immortal politics and human lives collide in ways neither side fully survives. Lucian carries centuries of guilt and a shrinking timeline — he must fulfill his obligations to keep the mortal world safe, but doing so means asking a woman to pay a price he can barely bring himself to name. The emotional tension here runs deep: this is a story about duty versus desire, self-sacrifice versus self-destruction, and what happens when someone who has stopped believing in tenderness meets someone who reminds him why it exists.
Alisa Woods writes paranormal romance with an unusually strong sense of consequence — the stakes feel real because the characters feel real, and Lucian's internal conflict is rendered with enough complexity to keep readers off-balance in the best way. The pacing is confident, moving between action and intimacy without losing momentum, and the world-building rewards readers who have followed the series while remaining emotionally accessible on its own terms. Woods earns the heat by earning the heart first.