The Final Gambit by Jennifer Lynn Barnes

the final gambit jennifer lynn barnesTitle: The Final Gambit (The Inheritance Games #3)
Author: Jennifer Lynn Barnes
Publisher: Little Brown Books for Young Readers
Publication Date: August 30, 2022

Summary (from Goodreads):

Avery’s fortune, life, and loves are on the line in the game that everyone will be talking about.

To inherit billions, all Avery Kylie Grambs has to do is survive a few more weeks living in Hawthorne House. The paparazzi are dogging her every step. Financial pressures are building. Danger is a fact of life. And the only thing getting Avery through it all is the Hawthorne brothers. Her life is intertwined with theirs. She knows their secrets, and they know her.

But as the clock ticks down to the moment when Avery will become the richest teenager on the planet, trouble arrives in the form of a visitor who needs her help—and whose presence in Hawthorne House could change everything. It soon becomes clear that there is one last puzzle to solve, and Avery and the Hawthorne brothers are drawn into a dangerous game against an unknown and powerful player.

Secrets upon secrets. Riddles upon riddles. In this game, there are hearts and lives at stake—and there is nothing more Hawthorne than winning.

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As a series, I found The Inheritance Games entertaining the whole way through. The books are full of action, and the danger Avery faces adds a bit of suspense that kept me hooked. I will admit that the second and third books in the trilogy felt like a lot of filler to me, but I still ultimately enjoyed the series as a whole and found the ending satisfying.

~ Olivia @ The Candid Cover

Jennifer Lynn Barnes

Jennifer Lynn Barnes (who mostly goes by Jen) was born in Tulsa, Oklahoma. She has been, in turn, a competitive cheerleader, a volleyball player, a dancer, a debutante, a primate cognition researcher, a teen model, a comic book geek, and a lemur aficionado. She's been writing for as long as she can remember, finished her first full book (which she now refers to as a "practice book" and which none of you will ever see) when she was still in high school, and then wrote Golden the summer after her freshman year in college, when she was nineteen.