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Book Review: Their Dark Reflections, by Amanda Meuwissen

Book Title: Their Dark Reflections

Author: Amanda Meuwissen

Publisher: Dreamspinner Press

Cover Artist: Tiferet Design

Genre: Dark Paranormal M/M Romance

Trope/s: Friends to lovers, vampire/victim, boss/employee,thief with a heart of gold, hidden agenda, kind but vicious vampire

Themes: Self-discovery, finding light in the darkness, embracing one’s darkness, love against all odds

Heat Rating:  4 flames     

Length: 70 096 words/204 pages

It is a standalone book.

Goodreads

Personal assistant Sam Coleman can do it all: housekeeping, groundskeeping, bookkeeping. The catch? It’s a con.

Ed Simon, his newest millionaire boss, doesn’t know Sam Goldman is a Robin Hood for hire who targets rich jerks. Sure, Sam keeps the money for himself, his crew, and his real employers, but at least they only steal from bad people.

Until sweet, fumbling Ed, who doesn’t seem to have a single vice. Too bad the people who hired Sam won’t let him back out. They want Ed’s money, and they’ll hurt Sam and his friends to get it.

For years Ed has kept people at arm’s length, but Sam’s charms wear down his defenses—just as he learns their budding relationship was an act. Sam isn’t who Ed thought he was, but Ed has a dark secret too: he’s a vampire. And someone is framing him for a series of bloody murders.

When the real villains force their hand, Sam and Ed must choose: work together, trust each other, and give in to the feelings growing between them… or let what might have been bleed out like the victims piling at their feet.

Buy Links

Dreamspinner Press  |  Amazon US  |  Amazon UK 

Everyone has a second face. 

Excerpt 

Sam was exhausted, probably because he hadn’t slept well in the past two days, but when he was ready to call it a night and looked around for Ed, he was surprised to find him outside, already in the pool. Sam was usually gone before Ed took his swims.

The tricked-out radio by the patio doors was blasting loud enough to carry outside, playing Blue Oyster Cult and making Sam smile. He didn’t fear the reaper so much himself anymore either.

Ed wasn’t doing any complicated strokes, just floating serenely on his back, arms gently moving to keep him up while he gazed at the stars beginning to glitter above him. He’d left the doors open as if to invite Sam to watch, so it was easy to do so without calling much attention to himself.

Ed didn’t look like a predator while swimming, his trunks clinging to him, chest bare. Sometimes it was hard for Sam to accept that dissonance—this version of Ed compared to the swift, brutal one—but then, wasn’t a lion capable of seeming like a housecat even if it was always dangerous?

“Would you like to join me?” Ed called without turning to look at him. “I have an extra suit upstairs.”

Sam wondered if that made him the lion tamer.

Enjoying the way Ed’s eyes fixed to his mostly bare body when he descended from upstairs in the spare trunks, Sam took his time walking to the edge of the pool, set his clothes on one of the lounge chairs, and stepped off for a simple, smooth drop into the water. He shook the excess from his hair and face when he resurfaced, seeking out Ed at the other end.

“Tell me,” Sam said, lifting up to float lazily on his back, “even without your telescope, how many of those can you name?”

“The stars? Or constellations?” Ed lifted as well, both watching the sky as they orbited each other.

“Does it matter?”

“No. I can name most of them.”

“Then where am I?”

Ed navigated to drift up beside Sam, tracing over invisible lines in the sky. “Gemini. Sort of like two stick figures holdings hands.”

Sam chuckled. “And you?”

“Pisces is there.” Ed dragged his finger the other direction. “See the way the ends connect and then it makes a sort of tilted V?”

“Doesn’t really look like a fish.”

“We had to be more creative back then.”

Blinking as what Ed was implying sunk in, Sam righted himself, not sure if he could ask, “You mean…?”

“I’m not that old.” Ed grinned. He didn’t clarify how old he was, however.

“You know, one of these days, I’m going to get you up on that roof to use your telescope properly.”

Ed scrunched his nose. “I wasn’t lying about not caring for heights.”

“I figured. Any particular reason?”

“I don’t know. Maybe because there weren’t as many tall buildings in my time.”

“Which was…?” Sam tried again, but Ed glanced away.

“Is this our first date?”

“If it was, would you tell me?”

“I said my age wasn’t a first date reveal, so….”

Sam read Ed’s hesitancy and didn’t want to push. “I don’t think this counts.” He smirked when Ed looked at him with a start. “We need to leave the house for a real date.”

“We’ll have to start thinking about our rain check, then.” Ed smiled back at him.

Drifting closer, Sam slid his hands around Ed’s waist to finally connect and pull him in. Even in the heated pool, Ed’s skin felt bracing. “I guess we will,” he said and started to lean forward.

“Sam.” Ed wrapped his arms around Sam’s neck, but his hands fidgeted, and he held back from letting Sam reach his lips. “You’re not only pretending because you think this is the only way to be safe from me, are you?”

“What?”

The idea that Ed still expected treachery surprised him, but then, Sam almost had betrayed him again, scared as he’d been. Ed was the most powerful and deadly creature he’d ever met, but he was still vulnerable, still so human.

“According to you,” Sam said, “I’m putting myself in more danger by being with you. You gave me an out, Eddie, and I chose to stay.”

 

 

About the Author  

Amanda Meuwissen is a bisexual author, with a primary focus on M/M romance, and works in marketing for the software company Outsell. She has a Bachelor of Arts in a personally designed Creative Writing major from St. Olaf College, and is an avid consumer of fiction through film, prose, and video games. As author of the paranormal romance trilogy The Incubus Saga and several other titles through various publishers, Amanda regularly attends local comic conventions for fun and to meet with fans, where she will often be seen in costume as one of her favorite fictional characters. She lives in Minnesota with her husband, John, and their cat, Helga, and can be found at www.amandameuwissen.com.

 

Author Links

Blog/Website  |  Facebook  |  Twitter

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Review:

I generally thought this was pretty sweet. I enjoyed how Ed could go from bumbling cutie to cold killer and how Sam liked that too. I liked the side characters, especially Gerry, who struck me as a little bit of a himbo. And I appreciated how Ed’s vampirism isn’t glossed over. He’s a killer, will always be a killer, and struggles with those same instincts even with his ‘love.’

I did think the plotting a little shallow, with things just happening and then being set aside until convenient again. (This was especially true of the police investigation.) The book also felt overly long and the pacing was inconsistent, tending towards dragging on occasion.

All in all, however, I enjoyed it and would read more of Meuwissen’s work

 

Giveaway

Enter the Rafflecopter Giveaway for a chance to win one of three ebooks from the author’s backlist.

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Hosted by Gay Book Promotions

 

Follow the tour and check out the other blog posts and reviews here

 

 

 

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Book Review of Alien Captive, by Lee Savino & Golden Angel

I picked up a copy of Lee Savino and Golden Angel’s Alien Captive from Amazon, I think on a free day.

Who knew reading sexy alien abduction stories could get a girl into trouble?

Or that an e-reader could also be the gateway to another galaxy? I definitely didn’t… but here I am anyway, mated to the Tsenturion High Commander just like the unwilling human heroines in my favorite sci-fi romances.

The Commander demands obedience. He intends to claim me, train me, and turn me into his perfect little pleasure trophy.

He doesn’t believe in love. I don’t believe in giving in without a fight.

There’s no amount of discipline or ecstasy that could break me to his will… I hope.

Alien Captive is a hot alien abduction romance, starring one feisty human and the Tsenturion Warrior strong enough to master her.

Utterly ridiculous, but not taking itself too seriously either. Meta enough to make it interesting, as Dawn is well aware that her predicament is predicated on her favorite fictional erotic books (which are just like this one), but that fantasies aren’t necessarily what one wants in reality.

Unfortunately, the book lacks in connection. Several of the important conversations that need to be had either aren’t had or are had with the wrong person. Essentially, Dawn and Gavrill may speak to others, but when together they’re entirely inside their own heads. They don’t have conversations, they just fuck. I couldn’t feel their love grow in the slightest. Further, all that sex got boring. It’s not just that there’s so much of it (I would expect that in an erotic novel). It’s that it’s all basically the same and eventually it felt redundant. Lastly, Dawn’s ‘misunderstanding’ felt forced and artificial. It’s been done better a thousand times before.

The writing is pretty sound though. And I feel like the authors tried to grapple with the fact that the ‘brides’ will be enslaved, even if that word isn’t ever used The reader is supposed to understand they love their situations. I never could quite make the leap, personally. I also thought some of the BDSM tropes felt shoehorned into the plot, honestly.

All in all, not great. But not a horrible version of what it is either.

Review Alphabet Challenge

Book Review Alphabet Challenge

This is just something to do for a little fun. The idea is to find a book review, from this blog, with a title that starts with every letter of the alphabet. It’s kind of similar to my yearly Author Alphabet Challenge, except that I’ll be using titles instead of authors and I’ll pull from all the years See Sadie Read has been active.

I got the idea from seeing something similar on someone else’s blog, except they were making book recommendations instead of using their reviews. It wasn’t until later that I decided to play along and unfortunately I didn’t’ bookmark the post to give them credit and now I can’t find it again. I think it might have been Westveil Publishing, but I’m not certain.

Ok, to set the rules. I’m going to start A in 2013 and come forward one year for each letter, skipping it if no book with the needed letter appears in that year. Once I hit 2020, I’ll loop back to 2013 and keep going. I’ll try and choose books without particles, but if the pickings get slim, standard particle rules apply. This means there is a certain amount of randomness, instead of deliberate choice, invloved here. You know how I love to let fate influence my choices.

So, let’s see what we can do.

Book Review of Harper Alexander’s The Queen, the Jack, and the Master, #1 & 2

Book Review of Beyond The Veil (The Veil Series, #1), by Pippa Dacosta

Book Review of Chance in Hell (Chance Lee #1), by Patrick Kampman

Book Review of Documenting Light, by EE Ottoman

Review of Eleanor, by Jason Gurley

Book Review of Flotsam (Peridot Shift #1), by R.J. Theodore

Book Review of Geist (Book of the Order #1), by Philippa Ballantine

Book Review of Heart of the Fae and Veins of Magic, by Emma Hamm

Review of In His Majesty’s Service, by Elizabeth Silver & Jenny Urban

Book Review of Justice Calling (The Twenty-Sided Sorceress #1), by Annie Bellet

Book Review of Kamikaze: Run Rabbit Run, by Alan & Carrie Tupper & Havana Nguyen

Book Review of Leviathan Wakes (The Expanse #1), by James S.A. Corey

Book Review of Midnight’s Daughter (Dorina Basarab #1), by Karen Chance

Review of New Moon, by Megan J. Parker & Nathan Squiers (+ Giveaway)

Book Review of S.B. Alexander’s On the Edge of Humanity

Book Review of Pixie Dust (Karli Lane, #1), by Laura Lee

Book Review of Queen Moxie, by Hank Quense

Book Review of Reclaiming Our Space, by Feminista Jones

Review of Laura Brewer’s Selarial’s Song

Book Review: Throne of Glass, by Sarah J. Maas

Book Review of Untamed, by Anna Cowan

Book Review of Vespers (Hours of the Night #1), by Irene Preston & Liv Rancourt

Book Review of When I’m Bad, I’m Better, by K.F. Johnson

Book Review of An Excess Male, by Maggie Shen King

Book Review of Yakuza Pride (The Way of the Yakuza #1), by H.J. Brues

Review of Zoo City, by Lauren Beukes

There, I’ve done it! Welllll, mostly.  I totally cheated for my old nemesis X. Every time I do an alphabet challenge there X is to catch me out. LOL. Apparently, in all the years I’ve been reviewing on this blog (since 2013) I’ve not read a single book with a title starting with X. I’ll have to read one now. It’ll bother me that I had to cheat. I promoed one called Xavier on Sadie’s Spotlight earlier this month. Maybe I’ll have to pick it up. There’s also a Listopia for it on Goodreads. So, I’ll fix this.

I enjoyed this. It was both easier and harder than I expected. But I had fun going through some of my older, forgotten reviews*. I also love that had I started somewhere different, say moved backwards from 2020, instead of forward from 2013, for example, I’d have a totally different list (though still short and X title).

All in all, it was a pleasant way to spend a Monday evening. Hope you enjoy.

*On a side note, I really need to fix 2013’s links that broke when I changed providers