55 reviews for:

Bloom

Helen Hardt

3.36 AVERAGE

emotional mysterious fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

I never thought I'd be a total goner for a main character who spends his free time dressing up like the Phantom of the Opera, but leave it to Helen Hardt to give me those unexpected feelings. 

I could not put this book down - for the first half, at least. Hardt did something I haven't come across in any of my readings: she kept the reader in total mystery by keeping the male main character's identity from both us and the female main character. It was actually sort of thrilling to be getting a character's perspective, to be in his head, but not even know his real name. It brought a whole new level of intimacy and intrigue that is hard to get from a fictional character. 

Of course, Frankie was determined to find out her Phantom's real identity, and that's where the story lost a bit of steam for me. To me, it felt like there was a clear before and after. Before Phantom's real name was revealed, it felt like the story revolved around Frankie and getting over her ex; after Phantom's name was revealed, it felt like the story shifted from her problems to his. I enjoyed both parts of the story, but I definitely enjoyed the first half more than the second. 

I love Helen Hardt's writing style and the amount of spice to brings to her stories, and Bloom was no exception. Frankie and Phantom had chemistry off the charts, even when drama caused some bumps in their road to happily ever after. While this is the second book in Hardt's Black Rose Underground series, it is technically a standalone. However, Frankie's sister - who was the main character in the first book - does make several appearances in Bloom, and some of the events from the first book are referenced throughout. 

Overall, I enjoyed Frankie and Phantom's journey. There were definitely parts of the book I enjoyed more than others, but it all came together nicely and gave both main characters the happy ending they deserved. 
fast-paced
fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

2/5. Releases 8/22/2023.

After a failed engagement, Frankie meets a mysterious man who wants her to call him the Phantom. At the Black Rose Underground Club, they have near-anonymous meetings, fulfilling her every fantasy. But as Frankie's feelings deepen, she wants to know the man behind the mask--but he may be more complicated than she expected.

Okay, so. I thought this was going to be a fun, ~modern~ spin on The Phantom of the Opera. Not exactly. It's more a standard contemporary BDSM romance with a bit of flare for the phandom. Unfortunately, it didn't work for me.

Quick Takes:

--This story feels quite rushed. And like, I didn't expect anything other than a fun, kinky romance, but just... the book feels very literally rushed off the last page, and it leaves the reader feeling dissatisfied. 

--Frankie overhears that this man is called Phantom, like by other people, like in public, and she recognizes his mask as a Phantom of the Opera mask, and she acknowledges POTO is something that exists in this universe, and he implies this is nOT A COSTUME and perhaps something he wears all the time, who knows? And her response is "intriguing". 

I just can't buy that. I can't. This is not an alternate universe. This is our world. There is no way an adult woman who has had enough life experience to get engaged at some point, would go "oh tell me more" about that situation without having some questions. Even in a kink setting, there would be questions, setting a scene, clarification. Even an extreme POTO fan would have at least internal questions, you know? Beyond "intriguing".

--I should add.... I'm not going to act like an expert in kink, and the portrayal of kink in romance doesn't have to be accurate. Sometimes it is, sometimes it isn't, I've enjoyed books in both contexts. Here, however, it felt surface level in a way I don't think it should have as it was (apparently) an integral part of the novel. It's not the side dish, it's the main course, and it didn't feel authentic here.

--In his first two POV chapters, Phantom quotes two different novels. One is POTO, which I expected. One is The Great Gatsby. There was no damn reason why this man needed to be quoting multiple novels that early in his own personal monologue.

--I think that in order for all of this to feel emotionally plausible, Frankie would've needed to be a massive Phantom Phan. Like, not casual. She has these little musings about floating to his lair or whatever, and I'll be honest, I'm not 100% sure I bought it. No, this woman needed to be like--sobbing about the show closing on Broadway, a Phantom-related account on every social media platform possible, downloads of multiple bootlegs on her hard drive, several of which she filmed herself, a contributor to a Phantom-related publication, Ramin Karimloo's autograph tattoed on her ass, card-carrying STAN. That is the woman who I can buy randomly hooking up with this man in what was not a pre-negotiated (for her) scene.

Like, she's just acting as if this is NORMAL, and again, while kink is in this book, this is not someone she met and formed a connection with outside of kink who's like "hey, I REALLY like to do POTO scenes with my partners, would you be the Christine to my Phantom?" This is just some guy she met at a bar who wears a half mask and talks about haunting an opera house, though I will add, he is not actually the Phantom of the Opera. 

I'm super into camp, but I think that when you do not properly acknowledge certain things in a contemporary romance, you cross the line from camp to just distracting, and that's where I was. I couldn't get into the book because I was so distracted.

The Sex Stuff:

The sex is... fine even if I did have my issues with the feeling that the kink wasn't... lived in, somehow? I also have a problem with an adult woman who seems to have a reasonably public, non-sheltered life being shocked when a man uses the "c-word", as she put it (she also doesn't know what a strap-on is, among other things), but that's me. It's not especially kinky, and there was a dialogue moment that really took me out of it, but. It is what it is.

I wish I'd like this more, as I do enjoy POTO, but I just couldn't get into the story.

Thanks to Netgalley and Entangled: Amara for providing me with a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

adventurous challenging emotional hopeful informative reflective tense 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
dark informative tense fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes

I am loving this new series. It's a spin-off series to Follow Me and I love these new characters. I got a glimpse of Frankie in book one and I think I liked her book more than book one. The mystery of the person under the mask was so good and so perfect for this type of book. I also liked that Frankie was a writer because I relate to that. I thought the spice was incredible and it's so exciting to see Helen Hardt's different styles come out through her various books. I did find Frankie to be a tad annoying at times, but I still overall really liked her as a character. Phantom omg, I enjoyed the nod to literature and I really liked him. It was great to go back to the Black Rose Underground. This book was a win for sure and I'm excited to read book three! Thank you to Entangled and Netgalley for sending me an e-ARC of this book to read and review!