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Reviews tagging 'Death of parent'
The Irresistible Urge to Fall For Your Enemy by Brigitte Knightley
32 reviews
Graphic: Death, Gore, Torture, Violence, Medical content, Injury/Injury detail, Pandemic/Epidemic
Moderate: Child death, Sexual content, Terminal illness, War
Minor: Kidnapping, Grief, Cannibalism, Death of parent, Fire/Fire injury, Alcohol, Sexual harassment
Graphic: Gore, Violence, Blood, Injury/Injury detail, Pandemic/Epidemic
Moderate: Cursing, Sexual content, Medical content, Murder, Alcohol
Minor: Child death, Terminal illness, Torture, Death of parent
Graphic: Child death, Death, Gore, Blood, Medical content, Death of parent, Murder
I didn’t realize this would be a series, I thought it was a standalone. However I like that there wasn’t an overly dramatic cliffhanger, since that’s an ick for me. I also liked that there was some good yearning. This is an authentic slow burn in my opinion and it was done well. I didn’t love aurienne’s character at first. I felt like she became more authentic as the book progressed but at the beginning and in small pockets here and there throughout the story, she was too much of a contrivance and not a human character.
Graphic: Blood, Medical content, Murder
Moderate: Sexual content
Minor: Death of parent
Graphic: Death, Violence, Murder
Moderate: Sexual content, Blood, Medical content
Minor: Child abuse, Domestic abuse, Torture, Death of parent, War
Osric may be a thief and an assassin but he also has a lovely relationship with his housekeeper and the frenemyship he has with another assassin will leave you chortling. Aurienne is hyper intelligent, focused and a gifted researcher but warm and cuddly is not her forte. But even she cracks when the magical malady that is affecting children (and only the poorest at that) strikes the local population and she and her fellow healers are left, without any major resources, to try and stem the pandemic.
Osric and Aurienne are soon entangled together in a forced proximity blackmailship as he endows her medical institute with cash and in return she just has to cure him of an incurable illness! Theses two have wicked banter and the witty repartee was wonderfully glib.
The world is queer normative and there was never a big drama when a little nugget of someone's sexuality or preferences were dropped into the narrative. There needs to be more of these kinds of worlds in my humble opinion. This is not a spicy romance, in fact there's only one scene I think that could be called steamy but there is much alluded to and spoken about so may not suit a younger/easily offended reader.
If you need any more urging to read this wee gem, here are a few of my stand out quotes:
“Irresistible Bastard Meets Immovable Bitch”
‘There was a heap of steaming excrement right in front of Aurienne, and it could talk. ‘
Aurienne said thank you, she would consult him next time she needed advice from an Abscess with inferior hair. Mordaunt, vexed, said how dare she, when her bun looked like a perfect onion?’
‘Can you stop fingering him while I’m speaking to you?’
‘You do realise,’ said Wellesley, ‘that you’ve only got one man here.’
‘No,’ said Aurienne with ruefulness born of sad truth. ‘I’ve got a monster.’ Now Mordaunt moved.
Moderate: Child death, Death, Violence, Blood, Medical content, Death of parent, Murder, Injury/Injury detail, Pandemic/Epidemic
The Irresistble Urge to Fall for Your Enemy has been highly hyped as an enemies to lovers. More than that, what appealed to me to request/pick this up was the slow born element. That slow burn is here. Mostly.
Graphic: Death, Gore, Violence, Blood, Murder
Minor: Death of parent
Graphic: Body horror, Bullying, Child death, Cursing, Death, Gore, Misogyny, Sexism, Violence, Blood, Medical content, Grief, Medical trauma, Death of parent, Murder, Toxic friendship, Alcohol, Sexual harassment, Injury/Injury detail
Moderate: Physical abuse, Sexual content, Torture, Vomit, War
This book was such a good time! A confident, no-nonsense healer, and a cocky, ever-optimistic assassin reluctantly team up for the most ridiculous quest - hunting for an impossible cure for a deadly magical nerve injury using nothing but folklore and "thin places" that may or may not actually work.
The whole thing is chaotic in the best way, packed with wit, snark, and banter that had me constantly grinning and laughing out loud. Aurienne’s cool, collected attitude is such a breath of fresh air, and Osric’s relentless charm makes him the most loveable murderous rogue I've ever had the pleasure of reading about.
The world was just as enjoyable, set in a magical-and-not-quite-modern-day version of the British Isles, with enough familiar names to get a sense of place without needing a map. I especially loved watching the characters wrestle with the clash between evidence-based, scientific magic and the wild unpredictability of folklore magic.
It's very slow burn, and so worth it - watching Aurienne and Osric go from squabbling and screaming insults at each other every chance they get to somewhat trusting (and maybe even needing) each other was utterly heartwarming, and exactly what I needed. I don't know how I'm going to survive waiting for book two!
Graphic: Gore, Violence, Blood, Murder, Pandemic/Epidemic
Moderate: Sexual content, Medical content
Minor: Child abuse, Death of parent
I also just felt like there was no chemistry between the two characters, and I think this would have benefitted from being first person or dual POV, so we got some inner monologue.
I was also pretty frustrated with the world building or lack of it, I guess? I understand that it was inspired originally by the Harry Potter world as a Dramione fanfic but we should get a better setup and depth than we did in my opinion and not rely on an already established world and the reader knowing it. I have not read the original fanfic to confirm, too, so I expected to be told or shown more than we were, and I was pretty confused at times with names of things or places.
I hope others enjoy it more than I did as it's not a terrible book. I just hoped for more and didn't want to continue at the 45% mark.
Thank you to Berkley Publishing and NetGalley for providing me with this ARC!
Moderate: Chronic illness
Minor: Death of parent, Murder