Advanced Review: Mr. March names the stars by Rivka Aaron-Hughes
I know like next to nothing about Paganism, so a lot of this book went over my head.
Queer book blogger | thirtysomething | marketing manager for a German bookstore
I know like next to nothing about Paganism, so a lot of this book went over my head.
And a big no go for me: The opponent, Jack, is thankful for being abused as a child by his father.
Apart from the lust problem, I had a chemistry problem.
I really liked it. Especially because I could see myself in a lot of characters.
The romance left me unmoved and nearly bored to be honest.
Very interesting and so very, very creepy.
I want mentally ill characters and I don’t want them to be romanticized either.
This book deals with different forms of rape and thoughts about consent issues. And I really like how it deals with it.
but you don’t drown in it. You do drown in the story – or at least I did.
Gray isn’t your usual bloodsucking, gorgeous vampire – instead he ‘lives’ in dead bodies and eats the souls of demons.