![]() I think I would have enjoyed the book more if there was less focus on "look how controlling men are" and more focus on how Faythe solved the problems all by her little self.But, other than that, I quite liked the storyline, and the main character. Despite reservations from my family and my Pride, I escapedthe pressure to continue my species and carved out a normallife for myself. But I am a werecat, a shape-shifter, and I live in two worlds. It was like not a single male could think of her as a real person, and not a possession.The sad thing is that she WAS written as a strong character, and was fully capable and competent. I look like an all-American grad student. there was so much time spent covering the same material on how the men in her life controlled Faythe that it became obnoxious to read.For example, every time a male character came into a scene, he tried (sometimes successfully, sometimes not so much) to control her. Perhaps Vincent was trying to make a point with this: such as how silly it is to treat women this way, but. I assume this is to appeal to the "romance" readers who have been conditioned to think of women as weak, and ready and willing to be saved by the knight in shining armour. ![]() it is a decent story, for a were book published by a romance line.What I didn't like about it is the misogynistic bent of 3/4 of the story. ![]() ![]() It is not as strong as Armstrong's wolf series, but. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |