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I cannot even begin to explain how much I adore this series. Though the storyline in this one is... let's go with absolutely insane, with baddies at every turn, really what makes these books special is the characters they're about, so the overarching plot is totally secondary.
It's nice to get more of an insight into Nick and Kels' relationship, but for me it's always going to be about Ty and Zane. Ugh, I love them so hard.
Another fantastic installation. Must. Have. More... Now.
Reread: July 2014
Reread: March 2015... and here we go, the sads to end all sads, with book number nine...
It's nice to get more of an insight into Nick and Kels' relationship, but for me it's always going to be about Ty and Zane. Ugh, I love them so hard.
Another fantastic installation. Must. Have. More... Now.
Reread: July 2014
Reread: March 2015... and here we go, the sads to end all sads, with book number nine...
dark
funny
mysterious
fast-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
emotional
funny
mysterious
tense
medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven:
A mix
Strong character development:
No
Loveable characters:
Yes
Diverse cast of characters:
Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus:
Complicated
i swear to god abigail roux is out to ruin my life im crying at that ending im so happy for them
3.7
Estos libros siempre me ponen de buenas, lamentablemente esté libro no fue lo que esperaba, en el libro anterior quedaron muchas interrogantes y muchas cosas por resolver entre Zane y Ty, y Roux simplemente las omitió en esté libro, ya no les dio importancia y ni se nombraron, yo necesitaba resolución por que eran partes muy importantes para la relación y confianza entre Zane y Ty. Nos dice la autora que nuestros protagonistas han cambiado mucho pero no nos muestra como, cuando por fin se reúnen no nos da ese encuentro entre ellos 2 solos, el volver a estar juntos después de 6 meses y más en la forma en que se separaron, solo lo deja pasar y nos da un salto en el tiempo.
Quiso introducir mucho a Nick y Kelly, te lo acepto pero por ello creo que no se enfoco en Zane y Ty y no le dio continuidad debidamente a los hechos que se venían sucintando.
En el final apenas quedaban una hojas y solo era sobre Nick, yo quería saber como estaban Zane y Ty , hubieran dejado lo de Nick para su libro, pero no a mis protagonistas apenas les dejo media cuartilla para cerrar su libro. Si me siento frustrada y timada.
Estos libros siempre me ponen de buenas, lamentablemente esté libro no fue lo que esperaba, en el libro anterior quedaron muchas interrogantes y muchas cosas por resolver entre Zane y Ty, y Roux simplemente las omitió en esté libro, ya no les dio importancia y ni se nombraron, yo necesitaba resolución por que eran partes muy importantes para la relación y confianza entre Zane y Ty. Nos dice la autora que nuestros protagonistas han cambiado mucho pero no nos muestra como, cuando por fin se reúnen no nos da ese encuentro entre ellos 2 solos, el volver a estar juntos después de 6 meses y más en la forma en que se separaron, solo lo deja pasar y nos da un salto en el tiempo.
Quiso introducir mucho a Nick y Kelly, te lo acepto pero por ello creo que no se enfoco en Zane y Ty y no le dio continuidad debidamente a los hechos que se venían sucintando.
En el final apenas quedaban una hojas y solo era sobre Nick, yo quería saber como estaban Zane y Ty , hubieran dejado lo de Nick para su libro, pero no a mis protagonistas apenas les dejo media cuartilla para cerrar su libro. Si me siento frustrada y timada.
I woke up yesterday morning to find a veritable barrage of messages from friends in my email inbox, on Facebook, and all over Goodreads. All of these messages were variations on a theme of:
“OH MY GOD! IT’S HERE! IT’S HERE! BALL & CHAIN HAS BEEN RELEASED EARLY! OH MY GOD! TY AND ZAAAAAANE! *SQUEEEEEEEE!!!*”
And, because I love Abigail Roux’s Cut & Run series probably more than is healthy and I’ve been waiting almost five months for this moment, my reaction went a little something like this:
“OH MY GOD! IT’S HERE! IT’S HERE! BALL & CHAIN HAS BEEN RELEASED EARLY! OH MY GOD! TY AND ZAAAAAANE! *SQUEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!*”
It was completely undignified (and I don’t care in the least). I’m not ashamed to admit that in that moment of discovery, had I needed to, I would have pushed small children, the elderly and even my own mother out of the way to get to my pre-ordered copy of Ball & Chain as soon as humanly possible. Thankfully, my Kindle is almost never further than arms-length away and a few clicks of a button later, Ball & Chain was mine.
Unfortunately, while I enjoyed the book and the opportunity to revisit two of my all-time favourite characters in the M/M romance genre, Ball & Chain didn’t quite manage to live up to my expectations.
Going into this book, I had high hopes for the mystery plot. I know that a lot of fans of this series merely tolerate its over-the-top mysteries and conspiracies because they provide a colourful backdrop for Ty and Zane, but I’ve always secretly loved them. They’re ludicrous, but that’s what makes them the perfect guilty pleasure. So, when the first dead body was discovered on the island, I was practically rubbing my hands together with glee and mentally preparing for all the snark and puns that were going to come my way.
But there’s no way to sugar-coat this one.... This plot completely jumped the shark. Even I couldn’t suspend disbelief this far. The body count? The reactions of the main characters? The motivations of those involved? The sheer number of those involved? The utter absurdity of who was behind it and the Machiavellian levels of machination and foresight it would have taken to pull off something of this magnitude?!? Good God! I felt like I was in a bad episode of Murder, She Wrote.
My brain just kept crying, "Abort! Abort! BAD plot bunnies! BAD!"
Thankfully, Ty and Zane still have insanely good chemistry together. When Zane and Kelly were standing at the docks waiting for the Sidewinders to disembark at the beginning of the novel, I had butterflies in my stomach because Zane had butterflies in his. His excitement and uncertainty and love were tangible and I couldn't wait to see how everything played out. In the end, their reunion was sweet and cheesy and exactly what I was looking for from that moment. And that first sex scene in Scotland?! HELL-O! When I finished reading it, I had to look around see if I could bum a cigarette from someone. That shit was H-O-T.
But beyond that bedroom scene and a whole lot of truly adorable hand holding and shoulder nudging that made my heart happy, Ty and Zane's dynamic fell a little flat for me in this one. There were some serious emotional landmines stepped on in Touch & Geaux that got roughly shoved to the side when the Sidewinders were suddenly recalled to duty. Ty and Zane had had six months without any communication; presumably they'd both done some serious thinking about themselves and their relationship and their future together while they were apart. In fact, Roux told us that they had. She also told us that they'd both changed, that Ty's temperament was different now than it had been before his deployment. And yet... I didn't really see any evidence of any of this. As far as I'm concerned, it was a whole lot of tell with very little show. I mean, heaven forbid the characters have a conversation about something this important.
One thing that I was really happy to see in this novel was the significant strides Roux took forward with Nick’s character. When we were first introduced to Nick in Divide & Conquer (Cut & Run #4), I actively loathed him for trying to come between Ty and Zane. I thawed towards him a little in Armed & Dangerous (Cut & Run #5) and a little more in Touch & Geaux (Cut& Run #7), but I still didn’t actively like his character. I read Shock & Awe (rolling my eyes at how Sidewinders turned out to be the most gay Marine Force Recon team in history) and thought that he and Kelly made an adorable couple, but I could really take them or leave them.
But Ball & Chain changed all that. It gave me a glimpse into Nick’s family history, his flaws, his fears, his demons, and a little about how dark and capable of destruction he really is. It shed more light on the complexity of his relationship with Ty, and filled me with warm fuzzies every time he looked or touched or even thought about Kelly. He’d finally become a three-dimensional character to me and demanded that I become invested in him. And I am.
Unfortunately, Ball & Chain is a Cut & Run book, not a Sidewinders novella. And although I enjoyed every moment that Nick was on the page, I couldn’t help but feel that the emphasis Roux put on his character in this novel detracted from the heart and soul of this series – the relationship between Ty and Zane. I felt that this was especially true given that the most emotionally stirring and tense moments in the books – those moments that most connect me to the characters - happened between Nick and Ty, leaving Zane to feel like a third wheel in his own story.
And don’t even get me started on the final few pages of the book! I could hardly believe how Roux sabotaged the drama and emotion of Ty and Zane’s final scene in the book by prefacing it with not one, but two Nick-centric scenes. Individually, they were good scenes, but HOLY STOLEN THUNDER, BATMAN! :(
Let’s be real: Roux’s books are always fun to read. I love the characters. I love the universe they inhabit. I even loved that Roux threw in practically every inside joke that this series had into Ball & Chain. Any time a character tried to utter the word "vacation" (the "Lord Voldemort" of the Cut & Run series) or when Ty had to get on the horse, I felt like Roux was sending her fans a cheeky little wink - like every joke was a "thank you" for sticking with the series and supporting her work. I thought it was sweet.
But I can’t lie, even to spare feelings. Ball & Chain is the weakest book set in the Cut & Run universe and Roux needs to seriously up her game if she’s going to end the series on the high note it deserves.
*** 2.5 Stars ***
“OH MY GOD! IT’S HERE! IT’S HERE! BALL & CHAIN HAS BEEN RELEASED EARLY! OH MY GOD! TY AND ZAAAAAANE! *SQUEEEEEEEE!!!*”
And, because I love Abigail Roux’s Cut & Run series probably more than is healthy and I’ve been waiting almost five months for this moment, my reaction went a little something like this:
“OH MY GOD! IT’S HERE! IT’S HERE! BALL & CHAIN HAS BEEN RELEASED EARLY! OH MY GOD! TY AND ZAAAAAANE! *SQUEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!*”
It was completely undignified (and I don’t care in the least). I’m not ashamed to admit that in that moment of discovery, had I needed to, I would have pushed small children, the elderly and even my own mother out of the way to get to my pre-ordered copy of Ball & Chain as soon as humanly possible. Thankfully, my Kindle is almost never further than arms-length away and a few clicks of a button later, Ball & Chain was mine.
Unfortunately, while I enjoyed the book and the opportunity to revisit two of my all-time favourite characters in the M/M romance genre, Ball & Chain didn’t quite manage to live up to my expectations.
Going into this book, I had high hopes for the mystery plot. I know that a lot of fans of this series merely tolerate its over-the-top mysteries and conspiracies because they provide a colourful backdrop for Ty and Zane, but I’ve always secretly loved them. They’re ludicrous, but that’s what makes them the perfect guilty pleasure. So, when the first dead body was discovered on the island, I was practically rubbing my hands together with glee and mentally preparing for all the snark and puns that were going to come my way.
But there’s no way to sugar-coat this one.... This plot completely jumped the shark. Even I couldn’t suspend disbelief this far. The body count? The reactions of the main characters? The motivations of those involved? The sheer number of those involved? The utter absurdity of who was behind it and the Machiavellian levels of machination and foresight it would have taken to pull off something of this magnitude?!? Good God! I felt like I was in a bad episode of Murder, She Wrote.
My brain just kept crying, "Abort! Abort! BAD plot bunnies! BAD!"
Thankfully, Ty and Zane still have insanely good chemistry together. When Zane and Kelly were standing at the docks waiting for the Sidewinders to disembark at the beginning of the novel, I had butterflies in my stomach because Zane had butterflies in his. His excitement and uncertainty and love were tangible and I couldn't wait to see how everything played out. In the end, their reunion was sweet and cheesy and exactly what I was looking for from that moment. And that first sex scene in Scotland?! HELL-O! When I finished reading it, I had to look around see if I could bum a cigarette from someone. That shit was H-O-T.
But beyond that bedroom scene and a whole lot of truly adorable hand holding and shoulder nudging that made my heart happy, Ty and Zane's dynamic fell a little flat for me in this one. There were some serious emotional landmines stepped on in Touch & Geaux that got roughly shoved to the side when the Sidewinders were suddenly recalled to duty. Ty and Zane had had six months without any communication; presumably they'd both done some serious thinking about themselves and their relationship and their future together while they were apart. In fact, Roux told us that they had. She also told us that they'd both changed, that Ty's temperament was different now than it had been before his deployment. And yet... I didn't really see any evidence of any of this. As far as I'm concerned, it was a whole lot of tell with very little show. I mean, heaven forbid the characters have a conversation about something this important.
One thing that I was really happy to see in this novel was the significant strides Roux took forward with Nick’s character. When we were first introduced to Nick in Divide & Conquer (Cut & Run #4), I actively loathed him for trying to come between Ty and Zane. I thawed towards him a little in Armed & Dangerous (Cut & Run #5) and a little more in Touch & Geaux (Cut& Run #7), but I still didn’t actively like his character. I read Shock & Awe (rolling my eyes at how Sidewinders turned out to be the most gay Marine Force Recon team in history) and thought that he and Kelly made an adorable couple, but I could really take them or leave them.
But Ball & Chain changed all that. It gave me a glimpse into Nick’s family history, his flaws, his fears, his demons, and a little about how dark and capable of destruction he really is. It shed more light on the complexity of his relationship with Ty, and filled me with warm fuzzies every time he looked or touched or even thought about Kelly. He’d finally become a three-dimensional character to me and demanded that I become invested in him. And I am.
Unfortunately, Ball & Chain is a Cut & Run book, not a Sidewinders novella. And although I enjoyed every moment that Nick was on the page, I couldn’t help but feel that the emphasis Roux put on his character in this novel detracted from the heart and soul of this series – the relationship between Ty and Zane. I felt that this was especially true given that the most emotionally stirring and tense moments in the books – those moments that most connect me to the characters - happened between Nick and Ty, leaving Zane to feel like a third wheel in his own story.
And don’t even get me started on the final few pages of the book! I could hardly believe how Roux sabotaged the drama and emotion of Ty and Zane’s final scene in the book by prefacing it with not one, but two Nick-centric scenes. Individually, they were good scenes, but HOLY STOLEN THUNDER, BATMAN! :(
Let’s be real: Roux’s books are always fun to read. I love the characters. I love the universe they inhabit. I even loved that Roux threw in practically every inside joke that this series had into Ball & Chain. Any time a character tried to utter the word "vacation" (the "Lord Voldemort" of the Cut & Run series) or when Ty had to get on the horse, I felt like Roux was sending her fans a cheeky little wink - like every joke was a "thank you" for sticking with the series and supporting her work. I thought it was sweet.
But I can’t lie, even to spare feelings. Ball & Chain is the weakest book set in the Cut & Run universe and Roux needs to seriously up her game if she’s going to end the series on the high note it deserves.
*** 2.5 Stars ***
This was mostly a fun read that I enjoyed. I had a good time following the murder mystery and the little pieces of romance on the side.
The problem? This book was more centered on Nick than Ty or Zane. It might as well have been a Sidewinder book. I like Nick, but I’m reading this series for Ty and Zane’s story. The further we came into the book, the more they became more of an afterthought to everything Nick. That wasn’t what I wanted from this.
Also, I’m so so tired of everything Vega and most of all Liam Bell. When he showed up at the end, my reaction was “oh god NOT AGAIN”. I skimmed/skipped most of Touch & Geaux and I will not hesitate to do the same with Crash & Burn if that continues in the same way. End rant.
The problem? This book was more centered on Nick than Ty or Zane. It might as well have been a Sidewinder book. I like Nick, but I’m reading this series for Ty and Zane’s story. The further we came into the book, the more they became more of an afterthought to everything Nick. That wasn’t what I wanted from this.
Also, I’m so so tired of everything Vega and most of all Liam Bell. When he showed up at the end, my reaction was “oh god NOT AGAIN”. I skimmed/skipped most of Touch & Geaux and I will not hesitate to do the same with Crash & Burn if that continues in the same way. End rant.
Another fantastic story in this series. This one had me hooked from the very beginning, and especially after they landed on the remote Scottish Island. Where so many shocking things happened but also there were lots of fun moments and some hot ones too, and I honestly can't recommend this book and series enough. It really is worth reading. :-)
adventurous
dark
funny
mysterious
tense
medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven:
A mix
Strong character development:
Yes
Loveable characters:
Yes
Diverse cast of characters:
Complicated
Flaws of characters a main focus:
Yes
I'm a bit surprised how Ty and Zane could skip all that drama and hurt that happened in the book before. But I'm glad to see them evolving and striving!
I am sad that this story is almost over. These two are my favourite couple. They seem so real and I will definitely read this series again.
》“Will you marry me, Zane?”
“Yes.”《
Cut & Run, ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Sticks & Stones, ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Fish & Chips, ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Divide & Conquer (Cut & Run, #4), ⭐⭐⭐.5
Armed & Dangerous, ⭐⭐⭐⭐.5
Dine & Dash, ⭐⭐⭐
Stars & Stripes (Cut & Run, #6), ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Shake & Bake, ⭐⭐⭐
Touch & Geaux, ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Author followed !
I am sad that this story is almost over. These two are my favourite couple. They seem so real and I will definitely read this series again.
》“Will you marry me, Zane?”
“Yes.”《
Cut & Run, ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Sticks & Stones, ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Fish & Chips, ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Divide & Conquer (Cut & Run, #4), ⭐⭐⭐.5
Armed & Dangerous, ⭐⭐⭐⭐.5
Dine & Dash, ⭐⭐⭐
Stars & Stripes (Cut & Run, #6), ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Shake & Bake, ⭐⭐⭐
Touch & Geaux, ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Author followed !