You need to sign in or sign up before continuing.
Take a photo of a barcode or cover
adventurous
dark
funny
mysterious
sad
tense
medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven:
A mix
Strong character development:
Complicated
Loveable characters:
Yes

This author is truly brilliant. With Fearless, she created a MC Club book that was about so much more than a MC Club. Suffice it to say that this book had me awed, enthralled, captivated, enamored, and consumed.

This book was quite lengthy, which may be an issue for readers who enjoy a quick read, however, the quantity of words and pages was absolutely necessary. Taking the additional time to read this is most certainly worth the effort.
I can't even being to imagine how the author could have shortened the story of these characters because IMO it was a stellar introduction to all of them. Although the story is primarily focused on Ava and Mercy, we got POVs from the entire Teague clan as well. Each perspective gave each character depth, explained the nuances of each scene, and despite adding complications to already complicated situations, they showcased how profound the history, relationship and love was between Ava and Mercy.
Yes, the book was long, but it was incredibly fast-paced. There was never a dull moment and I didn't have to skip ahead once. There is love and trust and loyalty mixed in with betrayal, conspiracy, murder, torture, politics, friendship, family, brotherhood, and redemption.
In a nutshell, this book was awesome!!

Mmmmmmmmm... Mercy... Jason... mmmmmmmmm
XO
5 / 5 stars

reread comment: this book was just as heart-wrenching beautiful the second time around. I read this book (much the same way as the first time), with silent tears running down my face. This book is perfect and it would be impossible to change a single thing, all the angsty pain and family drama just solidified my love for all these characters. LG's writing is a flawless work of absolute art, and it is now my mission in life to read all of her works.
holy moly, this book blew my expectations out of the water. I truly thought I had read through all the good biker books and so I rarely pick one up anymore, having read too many cliche and painful books. But when I was scrolling through a GR friend's top star shelf I decided to give this a go, and I'm so glad I did.
This book follows Ava Teague who had fled her hometown and the biker club she was raised in, moving away to college to get away from all the trauma she suffered at the hands of powerful people in her town and a horrible end to a relationship.
When she comes back home with her new boyfriend, all her past trouble start up again. The family with the most political power in her home town are after her family and her old boyfriend, Mercy, is back in her life and once again the feelings return.

reread comment: this book was just as heart-wrenching beautiful the second time around. I read this book (much the same way as the first time), with silent tears running down my face. This book is perfect and it would be impossible to change a single thing, all the angsty pain and family drama just solidified my love for all these characters. LG's writing is a flawless work of absolute art, and it is now my mission in life to read all of her works.
holy moly, this book blew my expectations out of the water. I truly thought I had read through all the good biker books and so I rarely pick one up anymore, having read too many cliche and painful books. But when I was scrolling through a GR friend's top star shelf I decided to give this a go, and I'm so glad I did.
This book follows Ava Teague who had fled her hometown and the biker club she was raised in, moving away to college to get away from all the trauma she suffered at the hands of powerful people in her town and a horrible end to a relationship.
When she comes back home with her new boyfriend, all her past trouble start up again. The family with the most political power in her home town are after her family and her old boyfriend, Mercy, is back in her life and once again the feelings return.
This book is long, obviously, but it feels like every time I pick it up I’m watching a new episode of a tv show. I’ve only ever felt that once before, years ago, when I read The Gamble by Kristen Ashley which was by no means my favorite book but that feeling, it’s back! I love knowing that I’m not going to finish this book tomorrow or the day after that because it’s so long. It’s comforting. And it’s different that reading a giant fantasy book because of the setting. That’s spiked tea, this is comforting hot cocoa. A bit angsty hot cocoa, but still. (I mean don't quote me on that because I'm halfway through and it might get to bourbon levels...I mean there were some pretty intense scenes worthy of top shelf stuff and a heartbreaking ones deserving of whatever poison Mercy drinks that burns your insides. It's just the overall feel of it is comforting. Reading about these people. A big family. I don't know why I'm making drink analogies just go with it.)
76% UPDATE
So I'm still reading this because I'm trash and I haven't been able to finish a book in two months.
Excuse you. This epic slow burn build up and you give me this? With their history? No. I did not just read all that for them to get together like it’s whatever, get married the second they leave and start making babies few days later???? LAME. I’m not asking for more drama but it’s clear that Ava and Felix’s relationship was pushed to the side and we’re focusing on the club, but literally nothing is happening. The mixed POV’s feel very disconnecting. Until now, I was there with Ava, on this journey, feeling and hurting but once you lose me and I’m just an observer all this becomes background noise and that really bothers me because I was really enjoying this book.
I am not entirely sure how I feel about this book, but I am going to ramble about it anyway. I am tentatively putting it in my unratable shelf, because any stars I give it will be very conflicted stars.
While there were things that I did like about this book, I am mostly going to talk about all the things I didn't, or at least was conflicted about, since they are what kept me from giving this a good rating, or a rating at all. While the problems in this book were many, complex, and varied, I think they can be summed up as technical problems, believability issues, ethics & morals inconsistencies, and poor character development.
First on the technical side of things, this book had a structural problem primarily with flashbacks throughout, but also with fragmented alternating scenes during what was supposed to be the climax of the story. More specifically the backstory was shown with flashbacks, where the book has periodic flashbacks early on, then a multiple chapter flashback arc, and then a few more scattered in the second half of the book. The multiple chapter “5 years ago” arc worked overall pretty well, with only minor transition issues. The rest of the flashbacks were for the most part intrusive, annoying, and poorly transitioned, even where an obviously important part of the overall narrative. I want to be clear that this was mostly just a problem on the structural side, not on the writing side itself. The scenes were consistent with the rest of the writing, so the problem is more editing than anything. The climax structural issue was more or less the same type of issue, but where alternating perspectives between the main characters and side characters simply didn't work given the way it was broken up into small brief alternating scene fragments, presumably to help increase overall tension and make it more suspenseful. I probably still would have dropped a star for these structural issues if it had been the only problem with the book, because it is as I say an editing problem, not per-se a writing one, but it definitely affected my overall ability to stay immersed in the story which compounded my believability issues as well.
Second! Believability. This one is complicated, so I am going to focus on the biggest believability issue I had: the MC itself. The MC alternated between being shown as a protective if screwed up family, and a violent amoral gang. In some ways it felt like a communal based society, like with scottish clan, where it was both one big “clan” family and multiple individual household families, having rules and leadership, and enemies fought, but also caring for the peoples around them. Unfortunately the illegal aspect of the club alternated between being grey area underground illegal dealings, and actual problematic things like the fact they had an on-staff murderer, and an on-staff torturer, and their first reaction to anything seemed to deploy them. Have an image problem? Don’t go to the police and work the system to your advantage, no torture and kill someone! I mean this entire aspect of the book simply didn’t work for me. It kept breaking believability, because in the real world, even with complicated morality, a culture that has kept itself around, and even part of a town’s fabric, for 80 years (or whatever), doesn’t do so by ignoring the law completely. It might abuse the law, it might make use of it when it works in their favor, and then work outside the law when it doesn’t. But that isn’t what happened in this book.
Instead at every single point, even when the law would have been good for MC image and inline with their goals they avoided it, they even actively worked against it. This aspect felt less like a rebellious side-culture and more like a violent anarchist mob. The first cares about public perception, and has rules and regulations. The second doesn’t care about public perception, or rules, or regulations. So culturally speaking the MC was a jumbled mess of inconsistent ideals, that in the real world don’t fit together. I think that even the torture and murder aspect would have worked better here had at several points in the story the characters not gone against their own self-interest just to bypass the law, because then it only would have come into play the times the law wouldn’t have worked in their favor which would have fit the complicated themes the author seemed to be trying to explore. Having some underground links didn’t bother me. Even the occasional gang like violence didn’t entirely bother me since they weren’t the ones instigating, and didn’t retaliate publicly in kind. But having on staff murderers and torturers and bypassing the law even when the law was on their side, just because that is just the way things are? Felt very unrealistically forced to me. And also at times undermined the believability of the whole “we are the good guys and just rebels at heart” the author kept trying to sell me.
Third! Ethics and morality. Okay to try and backtrack on this. This aspect of the story is at times pretty nuanced, because the author intentionally tries to show and play with the inconsistent ideals people can hold, such as the fact the main characters hook up at 17 and 30, and everyone except her mother but including her father (who hooked up at 16 and 27 themselves? I think.) seem revolted by it and actively break up their relationship. The fact this can squick people out makes sense to me. It didn’t actually bother me in this book, but other such cases I have come across definitely have in the past so I am inconsistent here too and know it. And of course the story is a MC with ganglike tendencies and mafia sensibilities etc, so morals in general are suspect. But what really really got to me was more mainstream aka the cheating storyline, because while there are all sorts of questionable morals in this book, and lots of iffy ethics on the part of the MC, the one thing that the author tried for was self-consistency. Except when it came to the boyfriend.
The entire boyfriend storyline was a huge issue for me from beginning to end, on multiple different levels, but the biggest being that ultimately she cheated on him and it doesn’t matter why, or that she has this big huge lifelong love with lots of history, because none of it makes it okay. She had been with her boyfriend for a year when she cheated, and yes she even felt bad for it… Until it was all “okay”. But here is the thing, the entire boyfriend storyline would have worked better if it had been a purely cheating storyline, and if she yes, owned up to it. Because if cheating is a question of morals (and for the main character it was, even though she is the one who did it), then it remains an issue regardless of the outcome. Instead the author acted like it didn’t really matter because the boyfriend wasn’t who she thought. Of course not. Because apparently so long as the one cheated on is secretly a horrible person that justifies the cheating. No. Just no. Cheating can’t be justified after the fact by new information that wasn’t known beforehand, because at the time she actually cheated, she had no way of knowing. This kind of attitude is what leads to serial cheating who always find new reasons to justify their cheating.
So yeah this whole part of the storyline was excessive, brushed off where it mattered, and undermined by this pointless sub-plot (that made for serious believability issues), and for no reason I could see except so she could get away with the cheating in the long run.
That leads me to the last major problem I had which was with the character development (and lack thereof) of the majority of the characters, but especially the antagonists. For example one of the big antagonist was a flat 2d evil troll type character from the time he was 8 when he calls the heroine a whore, and he doesn’t change in the slightest as he grows up. There was no depth to his antagonism, he was just a horrible person. This made that part of the book feel very cartoonish and flat, and undermined the overall conflict of the story. The second big reveal antagonist was more of a cypher and doesn’t make sense as a real person either:
I think the big problem with characterization here stems from the author’s attempt to use perspective shifts to make the villainous protagonists (the law breaking money laundering murderous motorcycle gang and family) the “heroes” of the story. A real nuanced character development of the antagonists of the story might have made them too sympathetic, undermining
I guess that sort of covers everything that led to my not giving it a rating (and it took me several days and 2 rewrites to make my thoughts as coherent as this), and not loving it. But to be clear, I did enjoy the way the author tried (even if she failed at times) to explore the positive side of this kind of storyline, and dove into more complicated issues such as the underage adult/teen relationship, the murder/torture as protecting family aspect and even such things as how the wives might be in the club for the sake of their husbands, not for the sake of the club, and when it came down to it, the wives would pick the husbands over the club. I also liked the specifics of the relationship development in the story, as well as the way her mother considered herself a "terrible mother" because she actually didn't have the same problems she was "supposed to" when it came to the 13 year age gap etc.
Anyway, hopefully that longwinded rambling/ranting made sense! (And to think this is after I cut it down from almost 3K really incoherent words)
I think I would still recommend to fans of MC romances, who enjoy the second chance romance, and don't mind cheating storylines and May/December adult/teen romances.
This book sucked me in. And it was nice and long, yet didn't drag. Very well written. The characters were believable and none of the plotlines felt contrived. Will definitely be reading more from this author.
3.5. Dragged at moments but overall a good and thorough read.
OMFG!! Such a good book! I'll admit I was skeptical when I saw that it was 800 pages. This is the longest book I've every read, and it was AWESOME! I usually hate the back and forth in time, but it was well written. Yeah there was a huge age difference between the main characters, but it was written REALLY well. Gave me all the feels.