Not every story can have a happy ending

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Set in a dystopian world after the Great Waves permanently changed world as it was known, Tempest, a sea diver sets out on a mission to uncover what happened to her parents from her sister Elysea.
The only problem is that her sister is dead. In Palendromena this isn't quite the issue you would think as a person can be raised from the dead...but only for 24 hours...and only for a hefty price. 
Tempest revives her sister in an attempt to answer questions she can set aside but everything gets flipped upside down when Tempest and her sister escape the facility to uncover long lost secrets. 

A good, if not slightly morbid read (in the beginning), grabs a hold of your attention and refuses to let go. By the halfway point I couldn't put the book down. 

My only con besides the story not ending the way I wanted it to would be that some of the minor characters weren't as developed as they could've been to make a seamless story. There where some points that left me feeling as though the characters were certainly not acting the way it would've made sense for them to...forced, as though the author needed to manipulate them to make the story go the way it did. 

Overall, The Vanishing Deep was a good read. I would recommend this book to adults and children 12+