League of Auld
Battle for Forever • Book 3
by Edward Savio
Why You'll Love This
A 1500-year-old teenager who has survived everything history could throw at him is finally facing something he wasn't prepared for.
- Great if you want: high-stakes action with a hero shaped by centuries of loss
- The experience: fast-paced and intense, with emotional weight from page one
- The writing: Savio weaves historical depth into propulsive, action-forward storytelling
- Skip if: you haven't read books one and two — this won't stand alone
About This Book
When you've lived fifteen hundred years as a teenager, you'd think nothing could surprise you anymore. Alexander Grant has seen empires rise and fall, trained alongside history's greatest warriors, and carried losses that would break anyone — and yet the world still finds ways to demand more from him. In League of Auld, the third installment in Edward Savio's Battle for Forever series, Alexander and what remains of his fractured team push forward against enemies who are older, deadlier, and more relentless than anything they've faced before. The grief is real, the danger is immediate, and the question underneath everything — how much can one person sacrifice before there's nothing left worth saving — gives the action genuine weight.
Savio writes with the kind of momentum that makes 388 pages feel propulsive rather than long, balancing mythic scope against intimate character work without letting either collapse into the other. The series has always rewarded readers who pay attention to how history layers beneath the present action, and that depth is even richer here. Alexander's voice carries the contradictions of his existence — ancient and adolescent at once — and that tension is where the book earns its staying power.