Reviews tagging 'Murder'

Spellbound by Allie Therin

5 reviews

wilybooklover's review

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adventurous funny lighthearted mysterious medium-paced

4.0

A fun and engaging story set during Prohibition era New York, with an interesting magical world. The romance was very sweet but maybe moved a bit unbelievably fast, especially considering that Rory is only twenty and very inexperienced. But Arthur and Rory are both very lonely and it warms my heart to see two lonely characters find love together. 

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hrtlss_grl's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional mysterious fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.75


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booksthatburn's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional mysterious medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

2.0

SPELLBOUND is set in the 1920s United States during Prohibition (with the addition of magic), which means that alcohol features pretty heavily in the novel. Prohibition was a real period in U.S. history when alcohol was illegal, which in practice meant that everyone who drank did so covertly and generally with drinks of less quality. Many people still drank, especially the rich. Enter Arthur, the son of a congressman with progressive policies in a sea of xenophobia and racism. The bit about his father's politics seems means as a shorthand for why Arthur's personal character is so good. It's ultimately immaterial (at least in this first book), since a narrative about how he's accepting when his family is intolerant would have just as much of an impact on the story. His best friend is a Black woman, and he doesn't care that Rory is Italian, the son of an immigrant. 

There are a few deliberate aspects of the characterization which are so blatant as to be either an instant turn-off or the reason someone might want to read this book. The first is the age gap between the two main characters. The dynamic between them is built on Arthur, the older, rich man, wanting to help Rory, the younger and quite poor man, whether or not he wants the assistance. The first place that this shows up is when they go to a speakeasy, and (lying that's he's twenty-six when he's actually twenty) Rory has his first drink of alcohol, and then several more. Arthur (in his late twenties) helps the drunken Rory to a safe place to sleep it off. Arthur seems to not understand the effect that his position and money has on Rory. He definitely thinks that he isn't being coercive when he tells Rory that he will cancel a particular debt if Rory does what he wants, but Rory feels very manipulated by this and like he doesn't have a choice. Arthur seems to think that it's all fine and not actually manipulative because he paid the debt before he knew whether Rory would do what he asked. 

The switch from just kind of lusting after each other to being in love is very sudden. The beginnings of their lust for each other is even more sudden, Arthur loves Rory's curls from almost his first glimpse of him. Likewise, it does not take Rory very long to start enjoying Arthur's bossiness as much as it exasperates him.

My general frustration is that it has so many elements that I normally enjoy and so I oscillated between enjoying the banter and then being thrown out of the moment when the characters just push past something that needs to either not be a factor or get way more examination. I prefer stories where the characters originally think it can't possibly work, but they find out more about each other and their situations they realize that they can. In SPELLBOUND, Arthur thinks that they are close in age and that Rory is just an employee of the person he needs for his scheme. What's actually happening is that Rory is eight years younger, with life experiences which are few and generally traumatic in nature, and he's the one whose cooperation Arthur needs for his scheme. Over and over, Arthur dismisses the actual issues and power imbalances and worries about the ones which are misreadings of a situation. I don't have a problem with a gap age gap relationships in fiction where both parties are adults. One thing that kept bothering me was that the more they learned about each other the more it seemed as though the only think keeping everything okay is that the author wanted it to be fine. The other frustrating thing was how often Rory is described aesthetically and positively in terms of just how young he looks, especially in comparison to Arthur. It's like the story wants to have it both ways, both that Rory is a full adult and is mature enough to be in a relationship with Arthur, and that part of what Arthur likes is how much of a kid Rory still is. It also feels very unearned, because as much as Rory insists that he actually is mature, the story itself doesn't really bear that out. Late in the narrative, Rory gets very jealous when some women are flirting with Arthur in a social setting. Rory is the one pushing for the relationship to deepen and be more physical, but because he hasn't had any other partners he doesn't know what exactly he wants beyond more intimacy with Arthur. 

Ultimately it's hard for me to enjoy a story that seems like a pile of red flags that the characters keep ignoring. Due to genre and story tone it'll probably work out, but this was a frustrating reading experience and I probably won't finish the series.

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takemetomilos's review

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adventurous funny medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.75

Queer historical romance, set in the backdrop of magical realism with a MC whose existence is a PTSD allegory? U got me there. 

Pts off for a few reasons 
  1. This book needed at least 80  more pages- more time to breath. The plot needed the time. Lot of lore and backstory for a book so short. The payoff of the reveal doesn’t happen bc literally no one has had time to establish why they care.
    Like ok Ellis is alive! I never gave a fuck.  The betrayal of ace’s friends never hit because we never had full scenes of their friendship - which still could have been accomplished in flashbacks.
  2. The age gap. The book could have been the same without an 8 year age gap or even if it was age up Rory so he isn’t fucking 20. Like why
  3. Also? I love how left Arthur is. But I’m not sure I believe it. A rich son of a politician who isn’t a shitbag? And somehow his father has won on a campaign of such progressive politics? Like he’s so “perfect” that it’s annoying. It’s flat. 
  4. the relics that literally will end the literal world are unlocked with a bit of blood? Seriously??? Your telling me no one thought better or tried that?
  5. No one here talks like they’re in the 20’s in the slightest. 

Cute book tho

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aromarrie's review

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adventurous dark mysterious fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes

4.5

i love the way the author made new york city in the 1920s feel so alive with all the magic that exists in even the darkest corners, but then also showed how much human prejudice and certain rules at the time (aka the Prohibition era) overlapped to cause for some great concern, especially beyond the seas at the time of the World Wars. 

these historical events being laced with magic and revealing the sinister consequences when those with such abilities are caught in the mix was genuinely really compelling, i can’t wait to read more.  

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