Cecy Robson
Autor de Sealed with a Curse
Series
Obras de Cecy Robson
Save Me (O'Brien Family, #5) 2 copias
Inseverable (Carolina Beach, #1) 2 copias
Gone Hunting (Weird Girls, #0.3) 1 copia
Etiquetado
Conocimiento común
- Género
- female
Miembros
Reseñas
Listas
Premios
También Puede Gustarte
Autores relacionados
Estadísticas
- Obras
- 38
- Miembros
- 793
- Popularidad
- #32,132
- Valoración
- 3.9
- Reseñas
- 112
- ISBNs
- 65
- Favorito
- 1
pgs. 169-173: Let's just say Robson plays around with a well known trope in vampire romances.
pg. 214: Sometimes the hardest way to hear something can be delivered in the most amusing way possible.
All that being said, this was fabulous. Celia and her sisters are a hoot, Aric and his wolves are a hoot, and Misha is a hoot (Tim kind of is too...and Ana Clara has some good lines about how willing she is to offer her ahem undergarments to Celia to help please Misha). This has the dubious pleasure of being the first 'urban fantasy romance' I've come across--though I guess I can kind of see how that is. Lots of hot naked guys running around, steamy kisses and innuendo like you wouldn't believe...but really this is PG rated when it comes to that.
Honestly the romance was nothing if not sweet and oddly romantic.
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This was a fun, sometimes creepy, oddly sweet book. This also has the dubious pleasure of being the first 'urban fantasy romance' I've come across--though I guess I can kind of see how that is. Lots of hot naked guys running around, steamy kisses and innuendo like you wouldn't believe...but really this is PG rated when it comes to that.
To get it out of the way two things didn't work for me and they fed into each other; Celia really only had chemistry with one of the hot alphas so as a result the triangle felt ludicrous. She makes it fairly obvious to the one participant that she's not looking for that. She repeats this quite a few times even when the option was more viable. Yet constantly he is there, making her basically uncomfortable. I wasn't keen on that.
Moving back to the good, Celia's sisters (Taran, Shayla and Emme) were all wonderful delights, as were the wolves of Aric's that hang around the most (Koda, Liam and Gem). The banters and jabs felt very authentic for sisters--the exasperation and impatience, the gleeful 'you're in trouble now!' reactions, etc. The wolves for their part weren't quite as forceful in personality, but they were easily distinguishable by their reactions if nothing else.
Aric was yum. He was yum from the first moment he popped up. That said he was also not the communicative type. A lot of why Celia was so torn over him was because he didn't her anything. He became protective of her, was flirty with her, but unlike Misha who was pretty upfront that he wanted Celia, Aric just assumed she understood. That really irritates me in books. When a girl does that the guy gets frustrated and accuses her of not taking his feelings seriously. When a guy does it, well the girl just has to suck it up while either waiting for a moment to discuss the emotions or suffer in silence.
The 2nd party obstacle was also a nuisance (not Misha, someone else). It felt like this person was just there to aggravate the situation when trust me Aric was doing a good enough job of that on his own.
As for the bad guy, the villain is pretty cut and dry and while most mystery or urban fantasy readers will probably guess the culprit getting to the reveal is fun (er gruesome fun). I do have to wonder since at least a dozen people are killed (probably more) and at least two dozen vampires...Tahoe Springs must be pretty deserted...… (más)