A NIGHT OWL REVIEWS BOOK REVIEW | Reviewed by: Ramos2011
Blame it on the Night by Shara Lanel had a different sense to it. Many books about werewolves are the same; they fall in love and mate for life and rarely have some plot to it. But this book was good, Lanel made the plot juicy and addicting. The pack of Guy has one simple rule never get involved with a human or suffer the consequences which was new to me. I've never read a book that had that type of plot in the werewolves genre. Anyways I really enjoyed reading this book, it was different from what I've read before and enjoyed it. Shara Lanel knows how to write these types of books.
Dec 22, 2011 | 9781611186628
5 - Rare Top Pick | 4.5 - Top Pick | 4 - I Liked It | 3.5 - Enjoyable | 3 - OK | 2.5 - It just didn't click
Book Blurb for Blame It on the Night
Human/werewolf relations were forbidden. Guy's father made that clear years ago, but Guy had come very close to disobeying with na‹ve, teenage Olivia. He'd barely kept his body under control, as he'd held her during her first shocking orgasm. Years later, on edge with anger, grief, and the pull of the moon, Guy knows she's the last person he needs near him. Olivia is overcome with humiliation at the mere thought of seeing Guy again, since he's starred in all of her fantasies over the past several years. She refuses to leave his doorstep, however, until he answers her questions about her missing sister and the dead body found on his property. Problem is, he's ordering her to leave while blocking the door, telling her to get lost while pinning her between his hard body and the table, saying he doesn't know what he's doing while his every touch takes Olivia closer to heaven. Sometimes forbidden love is worth the risk, but sometimes it leads to revenge and murder. Publisher's Note: This book contains explicit sexual situations, graphic language, and material that some readers may find objectionable: anal intercourse, dubious consent, f/f sexual interaction, violence. Previous Book: Blame It on the Moon
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