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L. Rowyn

Autor(a) de A Rational Arrangement

14 Works 104 Membros 5 Críticas

Séries

Obras por L. Rowyn

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Conhecimento Comum

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Membros

Críticas

 
Assinalado
Malaraa | 2 outras críticas | Apr 26, 2022 |
Short and cute. Especially Anthser and Callie.
 
Assinalado
Malaraa | Apr 26, 2022 |
Wow. This is what Sorcerer to the Crown wanted to be and failed. It's got several odd juxtapositions - Regency-type manners, a very interesting magic system, and a solidly Christian structure for several (not all) of the cultures dealt with. We have a young, powerful, but somewhat outsider and isolated magician trying to deal with something that will literally not only kill him but damn his soul to hell; a young, powerful but not in culturally acceptable ways, and also somewhat isolated young woman who wants to help him (when she finally figures out what's going on, which takes a large chunk of the book). Also the magician's focus (not familiar - though it seems rather obvious to me why Kildare hasn't taken Madden as his familiar, Madden doesn't seem to figure it out), an intelligent being in the shape of a large hare. History plays a major part in the story - who's trusted and why, old quarrels and their aftermath(s). So does culture clash; Isles humans, humans from other places (our hero is half-Dumachan; Dumachans are blue, Isles people are peachy-pink, he's grey (as many mixed-bloods are)), goblins from at least two areas with different cultures and languages, ogres, and dragons - or at least the memory of dragons, and some records of interactions with them. Old friendships and enmities, reconciliation, and the final solution - which has a heavy charge of Christian symbolism and viewpoint. I should have expected that from the Christian symbolism earlier, but the final answer surprised me. And while the immediate crisis is solved - and even the immediate crisis stemming from that solution - there's a lot more to the story. I'm looking forward to reading the next book.… (mais)
1 vote
Assinalado
jjmcgaffey | Nov 23, 2018 |
Nikola Striker, the Lord of Fireholt, is being pressured by his parents to marry. They have settled on Wisteria Vasilver for him. The match would probably save his family from financial ruin, but Nik really doesn't want to marry, and Wisteria's looks aren't to his taste in any case. Her personality, though... After Wisteria inadvertently offends his parents, Nik finds himself thinking about her more than he expected. Her tone and facial expression are impossible to read, but her words are refreshingly direct and honest. Shockingly so, sometimes. Nik can't stop thinking about her scandalous marriage contract, which not only covers how many "marital encounters" she expects them to have, but also, intriguingly, indicates that she'd be fine with infidelity as long as all parties are kept informed and behave discreetly.

Nik has been in a secret relationship with Lord Justin Comfrey for years. He cherishes their time together, a welcome break from his duties as one of the Blessed, those who are able to use the Savior's power to help others. Even so, he and Justin don't always have a good handle on each other. Although Nik still doesn't want to marry Wisteria, he finds himself talking with her more and more freely, and wishing he could tell her his biggest secrets.

Wow, writing my own summary for this book was...not easy. Since it may not be that clear in either my summary or the author's, this is a poly romance. The story takes ages to get to that point - for a while it looks like a complicated love triangle involving Wisteria and Nik, Nik and Justin, and eventually Wisteria and Justin.

I bought this because it sounded like it would focus on character relationships rather than on how often and in how many ways the characters could have sex. When I first started reading it, I thought it was delightful. Wisteria and Nik's conversations were fun, and Wisteria's marriage contract sketched out a way for the romance to happen without anyone having to cheat on anyone else, or so I thought.

Unfortunately, this still managed to have cheating in it. Wisteria married one of the men and found out about their relationship not because her husband told her, but because she found them about to have sex (or actually in the process of having sex? I can't remember and don't care to hunt the scene down). Luckily for them, she'd been having fantasies about them having sex together and thought this discovery was hot. I guess the marriage contract didn't matter that much. They soon invited her to have a threesome with them, she was delighted to accept, and the book wrapped up in a way that left everyone happy.

On the whole, the romance in this just didn't work for me. I'd have been on board with Wisteria and Nik, or even Wisteria and Justin, although Justin didn't seem like the marrying type. Nik and Justin were, however, an absolutely awful couple. Justin frequently inadvertently hurt Nik and Nik didn't seem to be comfortable with talking to him about it. Whenever he did try to talk about it, Justin didn't understand. Justin also lost a lot of points with me after his horrible behavior towards one of the riding cats (large, talking, intelligent cats that the humans in this world hire for riding and other purposes, since there don't seem to be any horses). And his behavior right after Nik tried to break things off with him was an insult to both Nik and Wisteria, even though he didn't take things as far as he could have.

In the end, despite what the author clearly wanted readers to think, Justin came off looking like the guy Wisteria and Nik wanted to have around for sex. His relationship with Wisteria was a little better than his relationship with Nik, but by the time I got to the book's "happy" ending I just wanted him out of their lives, for all their sakes.

In general, A Rational Arrangement was a lot longer than it needed to be. I feel like this would have been a much better and more focused work (and maybe more obviously a poly romance, rather than a love triangle) if the author had cut out maybe 200 pages. As it was, it took ages for Wisteria and Justin to meet, and the storyline involving the little girl, Sharone, went on for so long that it started to feel like pointless filler.

I was also very unhappy with the way the book's tone drastically shifted a little over halfway through. The bulk of the book was regency-ish dances, parties, and conversations (and an occasional explicit sex scene involving Nik and Justin). Then, suddenly, there was a very graphically violent scene in which one of the three main characters was tortured - which, by the way, happened at about the same time that the other two characters went off to make out and strip each other naked. The way the aftermath was handled bugged me as well. It felt like the character's PTSD was just a plot device designed to move things forward in the proper way. Once it had accomplished what it was supposed to, it was magically done away with (literal magical healing) and never really brought up again.

Unfortunately, this wasn't nearly as good as I'd hoped it would be. If I continue on with this series, it'll be because I bought the sequel when it first came out. In my defense, it was on sale and I really did think I was going to love these characters and this world. At least the next work in the series is a collection of novellas rather than yet another badly bloated novel.

(Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.)
… (mais)
½
1 vote
Assinalado
Familiar_Diversions | 2 outras críticas | Jun 30, 2018 |

Listas

Estatísticas

Obras
14
Membros
104
Popularidade
#184,481
Avaliação
½ 3.7
Críticas
5
ISBN
16

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