
I know it's not the saying but It would've felt wrong to say ππππ« ππ¨π«π as an Atheist talking about two sexy, feral, wicked heathens. This Re-read was painful but it was glorious. βππππππβ The last book before the final installment of the Savage Lands series is released, I'm getting emotional here. I wished this book owed up to my expectations, I really wanted to love this but it took a different turn than I wanted it to. But I loved the feminism shining through Brexley's character.

I also prefer the writing style to be a bit more intellectual. To sum this up, this is a personal opinion so to each their own! I don't know if I like their relationship dynamic and that is up to me, I tend to lean towards that emotional connection more than pure spice and empty words. When it really takes more for me than that little statement, he needs to show it through his actions as he's been a little shit since book one. I feel like the author made Caden say he was acting just for the readers to feel bad for him, and to create angst and tension. But what happened to showing us instead of telling us that it's there? "We weren't the type to speak our feelings out loud." To my dismay, and the reader doesn't get any deep emotional connection as their communication and relationship development is invisible to the reader but it's stated multiple times that they have this connection. It was overly descriptive and almost painful how aware I am that his eyes, are in fact, the color of aqua. I also did not need to know the temperature of his liquid thank you. The writing is extremely repetitive, especially regarding Warwick's physique. like how does their "sexual energy" increase the power of some nectar shit. like I get that he's a literal animal (wolf or whatever) and she's a demon I guess but hello. The spicy scenes are straight up from Wattpad, not that I'm complaining but I don't really give a fuck when I don't feel the chemistry.

Most of their conversations are so empty man, the dialogues aren't great. The characters are either shouting each other's names or "noooo!". The style is more instinctual that reflective.

The writing is nonsensical at times, I barely understand what the author is trying to convey.
