

There were so many elements in the story that addressed certain points of debate in current society. Because, trust me on this, it does happen. It gave the story a solid ground, a chance to build-up the tale gradually and methodically so that the big twists and revelations become more satisfying when it does happen. Nonetheless, it’s not all bad at the beginning of the story. This would make sense later on in the two-part series, but at the time, I was constantly just trying to grasp at whatever limited chemistry the story offered between our heroine and her Raven men. The romance was steamy, but not epic and there was a spark of chemistry, but it didn’t grow into this big inferno of passion. It’s not necessarily terrible, but I wouldn’t say it was the most entertaining part of the series either. The initial 40% of the first book was mostly slow. To say I was hooked is putting it mildly.īefore I get to all the praise in this review, I would briefly lay it out its negatives. My mind was conjuring tons of ideas and I have probably read the summary a hundred times but I found myself no less confused than when I read it the first time. I was thinking, ‘does this involve some type of cult? toxic relationship? abuse? cheating?’. My curiosity was piqued and my brain was coming up with a variety of general plot lines that could possibly placate my raging intrigue.

When I first read the summary for Flock, the first book in the duet, I was immediately drawn.
