Reviews

Inked in Lies by Giana Darling

mfspring's review against another edition

Go to review page

dark emotional mysterious tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

readbyriz's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

FIVE SUNTASTIC YELLOW SUNFLOWERS STARS

renaes01's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

I absolutely adored this book!!

Lila was an amazing heroine who went through so much trauma from an early age. But what I loved about her is that not only was she strong but a very loving and caring person. I loved Nova throughout the other books for how funny he was but his character developed so much. On the surface he was the happy Casanova but he had his own trauma and insecurities about his worthiness.
I loved their relationship so much. It was such a roller coaster. It went from friends to enemies to lovers/friends to enemies to lovers. And I loved every second of it. They both truly have so much love for each other but Lila was a lot more forthcoming whilst Nova thought he wasn’t worthy of her. The angst and back and forth between these two was amazing with so many scenes having my heart beating fast or putting a grin in my face.
I also loved seeing the relationships they had with the other members of their family. Like Nova’s family, Dane, Zeus, HR etc.
The plot was also great with the sex trafficking and many villains being really interesting!

I really fucking love how Zeus is a dad to everyone lol.

I know that the next book is Bea and Priest which I’m so excited to read. Another couple that surely is gonna get a book is Lysander and Honey! Maybe Dane and his mystery wife?
I also could be totally dumb but it seems like Darling is setting up the next generation....maybe??? There are a lot of kids like Prince, Ares, and the twins so maybe when they are grown up we might get their books!

theruinedwriter's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

I loved Nova I think he was such a good person and friend. The age gap was weird since he knew her for so long but other than that I liked the book a lot and the twists were really good.

gabbysreading's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

4.5 stars!!

Inked in Lies is some of Giana Darling's best writing to date. I loved this book so very much. Giana Darling has once again masterfully delivered a MC forbidden age gap that completely blew me away. Filled with angst, heat, heartache, and suspense, I couldn't put this down. I lived for all the unrequited tension and longing.

I've wanted Nova's book since Lessons in Corruption. Jonathon "Nova" Booth is so much more than the sexy, charming, charismatic heartthrob we've come to know in the previous books. We see his insecurities and his perceived flaws he hides beneath his gorgeous exterior. Gah!! Love, love, love him. Yes, there were moments where he frustrated the heck out of me but still his devotion and protection of Lila made me fall so hard for him.

Lila may be my new favorite Darling heroine. This girl had to overcome so much. She's fierce, loyal, and loves deeply. Even at a young age, you see her independence and free spirit.

Lila and Nova are everything. Aside from the obvious delicious chemistry they shared a genuine connection and friendship. I was rooting so hard for these two.

Inked in Lies is a wonderfully written passionate thrill ride. Book by book I fall more and more in love with the Fallen Men world. While this is a standalone, I would recommend reading the previous four books before this one. Every book is woven together so nicely. It just made Nova and Lila's story flow perfectly.

melinda1962's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

5+ My favourite in the series so far. I loved Lila and Nova and their growth together. Sometimes our soulmates are who we least expect. The ongoing storyline throughout the series is great. This one had sex trafficking in it. Sad that is a real issue in the world.

thebookplatypus91's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

“Nova’s always been the pretty boy, the affable, unflappable jokester. But around you, he had this depth, like this secret compartment in his personality only you could unlock.”

elisa03's review against another edition

Go to review page

medium-paced

2.75

dirtylittleromance's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

This book is definitely my favorite of the series so far. Nova and Lila’s story is so devastatingly beautiful.

I love that Nova was always a safe space for Lila and that Lila never always believed their love was stronger than anything else.

Bad Ass Bikers ✔️
Friends To Lovers ✔️
Age Gap✔️
Tattooed Playboy ✔️

5/5⭐️

klindtvedt's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

A Brutally Beautiful Book...

Over the course of the last four books in this series I have come to care deeply for Giana Darling’s Fallen MC world. These viciously beautiful tales of loyalty and love have anchored themselves within me and touched a part of my soul I had forgotten existed. Within the pages of “The Fallen Men” books are stories for those of us who have lived lives touched by darkness and who yearn for something that can also flourish in the light. Each and every book in this series thus far, from Zues and Lou to King and Cressida attack your senses, dragging your emotions through a literary field of barbed wire that leaves you gasping, pricked and left bleeding by the intensity of all they contain. None more so than book four, or so I thought, until I read this book, and was confronted with a level of inner turmoil so cavernous it brought me to my knees.

Here within the pages of “Inked in Lies” Darling gifts us the story of our favorite resident pretty boy Jonathan “Casanova” Booth, a biker with abundant arrogant charm and panty melting ways. And Lila Meadows, his onetime neighbor who we are introduced to fleetingly throughout the previous books, but who you quickly come to realize is anything but the flighty hippy chick she appears to be. Theirs is a pairing unlike any of the others. One born in childhood, under dubious circumstances when Nova and his family move in across the street on a day Lila’s father, the town drug dealer, just so happens to commit murder in his livingroom. An act that changes Lila’s life, and the life of her brother Dane forever, in ways that reverberate for years to come.

Unlike the other books, here we are rooted securely in the female’s point of view. Here through Lila’s eyes we are given a retrospective of growth, growth of the club, growth of Nova from boy to man, and of Nova’s place within all that surrounds them. We are given a view of Nova, the all too cocky, seemingly put together MC brother who has had Lila’s back since she was five in most unexpected ways previously unseen. We are shown a man who, despite his haughty, man-whore ways, has been her best friend, her protector, her person, the one she knows inside and out better than anyone else. But also a man deeply removed who hides himself away not only from those around him, but also from himself. And as the years go by he becomes a man afraid of the love rooted deeply in his heart, full of doubts, and fear, and self-hatred, who pushes away everything trying to get close to him because of the feelings of unworthiness forcibly planted deep within his soul.  What follows is a powerful and haunting story.

Lila and Nova's friendship is forged from neglect and violence, forces that shape them in unexpected ways, and as they grow they morph, and unlike the other installments of this series, this story is as much a tale of the many ways we incorrectly see ourselves as it is a story of perseverance and overwhelming, all consuming love.  It is the story of a girl born of violence into violence, with tragedy etched in her tiny five year old eyes, forced to grow wise long before she should have. A shining, loving, girl, who survives everything life has to throw at her including Nova’s own demons, demons that may destroy him and lead her to endure the loss of him, something far more brutal then everything that has come before it.

It is a brutally beautiful book offering an unexpected but welcomed perspective. While the other Fallen women are strong in their own right, Lila is different. She has a strength skewed differently than the other women. Every ounce of emotional fortitude within her is born from pain and the subsequent deep seated fear of abandonment her father, her mother, and even her cherished brother seed within her. As a result she martyrs herself in ways the other women would not, does not view herself as having the same connections to love and care with those around her that the other couples do. It is a revelation by the author that propels you forward through each and every page of this book, a state of being that fractures your soul and makes you ache for Lila in ways you have not yet ached for any other character so far in the series. And as she grows, makes discoveries about herself and about Nova. As Nova in turn makes discoveries about himself through Lila’s actions and reactions, the emotions will overwhelm your senses. You will be helpless in preventing the knot that forms in the middle of your chest, your soul will ache as you watch their connection emerge and evolve page after emotionally churning page. It is a heady experience that is as awe inducing as it is magnificent.

This series continues to be one filled with stories about love rooted in darkness. Of the kinds of human connections that can withstand the blackness and depravity around it, be made stronger by it.  Where other series fall flat after the first few installments this one just keeps getting better and more intense, taking you to emotional heights previously unknown and unexplored.

I will honestly mourn the loss of these characters when this series ends. I will grieve the loss of their heartaches and pleasures, their revelatory journeys and found joy. But mostly I will grieve the feeling of recognition and kinship I have with them, many of whom triggered profound, long let go of memories within me, and forced to the surface specters of things not thought of in years. I have written much on Sadt Cookie about my life and why I read romance books often viewed as too dark, too violent, too sadistic or unkind for the mainstream. I am a lover of dark things and honest emotions, and this book contains a depth and honesty I cannot thank Giana Darling enough for. An easy five stars from me for this book, and I cannot wait to read Priest’s story in book six!