Photo de l'auteur

Allie Therin

Auteur de Spellbound

7 oeuvres 421 utilisateurs 45 critiques

Séries

Œuvres de Allie Therin

Spellbound (2019) 154 exemplaires
Starcrossed (2020) 68 exemplaires
Wonderstruck (2021) 54 exemplaires
Proper Scoundrels (2021) 53 exemplaires
Liar City (2023) 51 exemplaires
Once a Rogue (2023) 31 exemplaires
Magic in Manhattan Collection (2021) 10 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Sexe
female
Nationalité
USA
Professions
author
attorney
bookseller

Membres

Critiques

5 / 5 ⭐️‘s

“Liar City” by Allie Therin @allietherin

"You don't have to cuff me. I'll stay put."
"You haven't stayed put even once today. You think I'm gonna take chances now?"

Admittedly, I was drawn to this book by the cover. I knew immediately seeing the Space Needle on it that it would be set in Seattle and PNW area.

I was hooked right off the bat with the Sci-Fi & Fantasy elements of the story and each chapter left me wanting more.

The sexual tension between Reece and The Dead Man is palpable and I cannot wait to see what happens in the next book!

(Pub Date: 02/28/23)
Thank you to @allietherin & @netgalley for the eARC!
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
thisgayreads | 6 autres critiques | Nov 4, 2023 |
Overall, a good read that blended elements of history, magic, romance, and adventure. My only compliant is that sometimes it felt like the story switched between a romance novel and a paranormal adventure, making it feel a little uneven. I may need to check out the other books in this series.
 
Signalé
wagner.sarah35 | 16 autres critiques | Oct 8, 2023 |
Once A Rogue by Allie Therin
Roaring Twenties Magic #2

Another wonderful historical romance that drew me in, made me smile, and made me care.

What I liked:
* Sebastian: paranormal, magic user, in a relationship with Wesley-Lord Fine, talkative, kind, takes in and feeds stray cats in more than one country, medic in WWI, calmer with Wesley than alone, from a loving family, Puerto Rican, good friend, like him with and for Wesley
* Wesley: has no magic, strong, intelligent, was a Captain in the British Army during WWI, a bit gruff and grumpy, doesn’t see the good in him but it is seen by Sebastian, claims not to have emotions but definitely has the feels for Sebastian
* The close relationship that is developing between Sebastian and Wesley – can see them together for the long haul
* The plot, pacing, setting, and character development
* The mystery of where Jade, Zhang, Arthure, and Rory are and the way the main characters sleuth to find them
* The mystery of who the bad guys are and what they are up to
* That friendship developing between Arthur & Roray and Wesley & Sebastian
* The conclusion and wondering what will come next

What I didn’t like:
* Who and what I was meant not to like
* Thinking about how twisted some people can become…and boy was Langford easy to hate!

Did I like this book? Yes
Would I read more in this series? Definitely

Thank you to NetGalley and Carina Press for the ARC – This is my honest review.

5 Stars
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
CathyGeha | Sep 28, 2023 |
I really loved the dynamic in this, and I think the story overall was pretty fun, if a bit fast-paced at times. The cast is lovely. What let it down was a bit of weirdness with plot that got a bit... overly silly, and I'm mostly just grateful there was no point where it was revealed that Pavel designing potions they didn't know the use of and them ending up being entirely used up by the antagonists was actually a GOOD thing and what the potions were meant for.

I'm also not entirely sure if I love the dynamic on its own, or mostly because it resembles another character dynamic with part of a vaguely similar plot to an ongoing serial I'm reading, and so I see that here and like it, but not so much on its own merits.

I also agree that the time period/locale/culture was underused, but I don't fully expect an overwhelming look at Prohibition-era New York, especially with white leads. It's m/m romance, not just historical fiction with a romance subplot. And I honestly found the dialect more distracting than interesting, used correctly or not. It did vaguely give me "Lackadaisy" vibes, for obvious reasons (Rory in particular reminds me a bit of Freckle). But of course "Lackadaisay" can just show us all the neat Prohibition-era research that Tracy Butler did for that comic, whereas the book has to tell us... and it kind of does. Sort of. I was more... surprised than anything else that we were frequently in Hell's Kitchen than feeling like we were actually in it, to the point that I just kept expecting Daredevil to jump down at some point rather than imagining the world Rory lived in.

Perhaps the biggest issue was I found the climax disappointing. At first irritating, and then it kind of made up for itself, but overall it was just... silly, in a lot of ways. Rory bumping into Ellis was okay enough, but then Ace somehow not getting Rory kicked out, and then seemingly standing in plain sight to talk to waitstaff and no one said anything? And Rory is 20 years old, yes, we know, and seemingly has no comprehension that being visibly gay with another man could be dangerous for him? Because it's never something that pops into his mind. We're meant to see him as smart and street savvy and yet he's at turns quick-witted and creative, and other times truly oblivious. I love how bi/pansexual he's written, but the fact that Ace heavily emphasizes the danger, even though he's far more privileged (though admittedly his concern is more for his family than himself), while Ace, a far less privileged person who is used to having run-ins with authority figures and has reached the mature age of 20 years old while living in Hell's Kitchen is entirely oblivious is... well...

It's also frustrating how the story punishes you for taking it seriously. You're not meant to think too hard about how dumb it is that Ace and Co., just bring some unknown potions with them with no attempt to discover their usefulness on the off-chance they'll be useful, despite how incredibly stupid it is, and how you're told, time and again, that the people in this group are quite smart and good at what they do. But you were meant to think a bit how strange it was that "Phillipe" died in a fire at sea. And the second is obviously strange. My assumption was that Phillipe was a traitor who got killed by someone else. He knew something. Which is sort of true. I also still have no idea why Rory was able to use one relic to find Ace. Not the relic ON Ace. Ace. The relic, which was locked and not bound to him, just sort of... modified a vision of the past to give him a direction to his boyfriend?

I also do appreciate that the magic in this universe has a lot of rules, and it's not the most useful or even safest thing in the world, though it can be made to do incredible things in the right hands and with the right training. But this world's magic seems to much more trouble than it's worth, and it's not all that fun to explore. When even an object of power just in the open air hurts anyone with magic. When mundanes can't see magic users who can go invisible but magic users... can? The rules are just weird and kind of silly. If you don't think too hard about it, it's fine, and that's fair enough, but it's... mm...


Overall, it was an interesting introduction to the story universe, and given what I've seen of the summary for book 2, I'm interested in going on, particularly because I want to read the spin-off novel. But I'm cautious going on.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
AnonR | 16 autres critiques | Aug 5, 2023 |

Listes

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi

Auteurs associés

Joel Leslie Narrator
Joel Froomkin Narrator

Statistiques

Œuvres
7
Membres
421
Popularité
#57,942
Évaluation
4.1
Critiques
45
ISBN
21

Tableaux et graphiques