There is No Light in Darkness - Claire Contreras
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There is No Light in Darkness - Claire Contreras
While Cole and Blake rekindle their relationship in very steamy portions of the book, it felt flat. The initial moment when they "get back together" is fueled with a hot physical reconnection, but is lacking the emotional connect so it feels more like a fling...except they stay together. The writer continues through the book to try to add in the emotional connect but it falls very short of believable.
Add in that Blake now has mysterious amounts of money, someone appears to be following her, and she begins to recognize men from the night her parents were murdered, it is a lot of story lines that become tangled rather than seeming together. Topped off with a cliffhanger ending that forces you to get book 2, this book leaves readers frustrated and trying to remember what exactly is going on.
- hollirm
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- Posts: 77
- Joined: 26 Sep 2014, 15:46
- Bookshelf Size: 14
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-therhinofam.html
It was not a second person; it was me both times. This is the review of the first book. The other review is for the second book. I would actually have loved to see them together in a single book with some additional editing.hollirm wrote:I find it interesting that you are the second person to say the same thing about this book. I read a review over the second book but the first book was also mentioned. They also said that there was a different writing style for the first half of the first book then the rest of the book and the second book.
The first half of book 1 depicts the main character, Blake, as a strong and confident woman trying to piece together gaps from her past and reconcile her heart with the man she loves, Cole. The first half also has the reader alternating between Blake's past and her present. Once the reader is about half way through the book, the alternating stops and then the author begins to impose random jumps in time. It didn't feel very cohesive for the story.
― Charlotte Brontë, Jane Eyre
- hollirm
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