3.64 AVERAGE

kimmaire's review

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medium-paced

3.0

elenajohansen's review

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1.0

This is one of those reads that was so disjointed, I hardly know where to start unpicking the tangle of my thoughts about it. So let me try a point-by-point list format.

World-building: Sucks. Even if we set aside the weird grafting of pseudo-Irish fae onto a biker gang (hey, genre-mixing is fun sometimes, I applaud the creativity if not the end result) there's a slapdash quality to everything, curses and goddesses and fairy mythos piled together without anything resembling a plan. I admit my paranormal fantasy reading is limited to one big-name author and several lesser-known indies, so pardon my comparison to the Kate Daniels series by Ilona Andrews: but this story is like the first KD book, only with even less explanation for anything. (I loved the whole series ultimately but I did feel the world-building in the first two novels could have been clearer.)

Characters: Too many and too shallow. And I mean waaaaay too many. There's the main couple, fine, but they've also got a third wheel grafted onto them, sort of. And that third wheel has two fated mates, apparently, and part of the story involves them, and also like six other characters surrounding them. And there's twelve members of the gang total, which isn't unreasonable in theory, but taking a whole chapter to randomly assign two more of them their mates from among the heroine's incredibly tiny circle of friends felt excessive and clunky. And there's a subplot about figuring out the heroine's fae lineage, which introduces several of her family members, and the first one we meet (her grandpa) is kind of entertaining and probably justified his place in the story, but everyone else shows up for ten seconds and acts like they own the place (story.) But I know nothing about these people! Why are they important?

Plot: what plot? No, seriously, what happens? There is no overarching story line beyond the romance, it's just a bunch of hooligans freeing the heroine from her curse (sort of) before the end of the first act, when I was under the impression that was a serious obstacle in her life, and then they just spend the rest of the book gallivanting around picking off minor bad guys and getting a tiny bit roughed up by Queen Bitch's guards. Which I guess was supposed to be the main plot, that the romance is putting the heroine in danger from her lover's mom? Only it never felt imminent enough to make it an actual threat, and so much else was going on that had nothing to do with it. Or nothing to do with anything, as far as I can tell.

Romance: blarg. Fated mates is not my favorite trope, but this wasn't even trying to pretend the protagonists had any chemistry, or reason to be together beyond "he says so," or even the slightest bit of sexual tension. The hero is just a gross man-child who steamrolls the heroine in nearly every way possible, including making his second-in-command a part of their sexual proceedings, not explicitly against her will, but definitely with a lot of coaxing to get her comfortable with the idea. I'm not at all against kink in general or threesomes in particular, but all of this felt like it was entirely out of left field, and not justified in any way by their personalities (what little they have) or any sort of thematic necessity.

When I got to the end matter and found out this book is the first in its duology, but not the first in the story universe, the shoddy world-building and vague feeling that I'd somehow been dropped in the middle of something unfamiliar became more understandable. But either it should be able to stand on its own anyway, or there should be some sort of indication in the front matter that this isn't the beginning of the story, and I should not start here.

siling's review

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

3.75

see_sadie_read's review against another edition

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2.0

Mechanically the writing in this book is fine. However, I really disliked it. It was full of quotes like this, "She didn’t want to give in to the six-foot-whatever pain in her ass, but ceding bits of her control to him felt so easy. So…natural." Now, that's not a generalizable quote. That comes from a sex scene and directly equates having sex with the male lead with accepting their relationship and therefore "ceding control" to him...in general, not just in the bedroom. Then random BDSM tropes were thrown in, but not discussed, such that it was inferred him having such control was normal and natural because all women always apparently want to give up their control to a man. So, there's no reason to discuss kinks or anything.

Then a random three-some was thrown in (for their first time together) and it's framed like this: “If he were less kind, he’d make you his plaything,” Thom said. “You may bear the title of wife, but he doesn’t have to treat you like one. He chooses to because he wants you. Do you understand?” Nothing, I repeat, nothing about that is sexy to me. This is the sort of gendered BS that makes me avoid M/F romance for large chunks of time!

I did appreciate the black heroine. You don't see that often enough. And again, the writing is mechanically fine, which is the only reason I haven't given this a one-star. But unless you're particular kink is seeing women subjugated, I wouldn't recommend this book.

ccbowman4284's review

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adventurous funny fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Complicated
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Complicated

4.0

brazenbookbabe's review against another edition

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adventurous funny fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Complicated

4.0

This was a fun read. 

cranberrytarts's review

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2.0

I'm DNF'ing this book about 100 pages in. It's slow moving and something about the writing doesn't work for me. I may come back to it at a later date, since I'm not sure if it's my current reading mood or the book.

rashbrook's review

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3.0

3.5
This book was an erotic story with supernatural drama at its center. The world of the fae, goddesses, and humans collide with all of the sexuality and brutality that this fictional world commands. The main characters were charismatic and relatable, even as they were otherworldly.

There were moments that felt like plot holes but were figured out eventually. I will be reading more by this author!

see_sadie_read's review

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2.0

Mechanically the writing in this book is fine. However, I really disliked it. It was full of quotes like this, "She didn’t want to give in to the six-foot-whatever pain in her ass, but ceding bits of her control to him felt so easy. So…natural." Now, that's not a generalizable quote. That comes from a sex scene and directly equates having sex with the male lead with accepting their relationship and therefore "ceding control" to him...in general, not just in the bedroom. Then random BDSM tropes were thrown in, but not discussed, such that it was inferred him having such control was normal and natural because all women always apparently want to give up their control to a man. So, there's no reason to discuss kinks or anything.

Then a random three-some was thrown in (for their first time together) and it's framed like this: “If he were less kind, he’d make you his plaything,” Thom said. “You may bear the title of wife, but he doesn’t have to treat you like one. He chooses to because he wants you. Do you understand?” Nothing, I repeat, nothing about that is sexy to me. This is the sort of gendered BS that makes me avoid M/F romance for large chunks of time!

I did appreciate the black heroine. You don't see that often enough. And again, the writing is mechanically fine, which is the only reason I haven't given this a one-star. But unless you're particular kink is seeing women subjugated, I wouldn't recommend this book.

rincondejoss's review

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4.0

at the beginning I had my doubts it was like what im hearing? but after awhile the pieces begin to come together and I found it was pretty fun.

the narrator helped me with the story, I think she played a major role for me to come to like the story, the voices she made were pretty lively I liked that.

the story was interesting too in it's own way since it had mythology and I love that kind of thing.

in all it was fun and interesting, it had some parts when I wanted to kill either one of the protagonists but they grow on you if you give them the chance.

and the end hook me since now I want to know what will happen with Ethan and Dasha.