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review 2015-08-31 00:00
Beauty and the Werewolf
Beauty and the Werewolf - Kristin Miller Beauty and the Werewolf - Kristin Miller I don't want anyone to think I didn't enjoy this story because I did, but I was kinda expecting a little more from the description that was given. Isabelle is an international artist and soon to be pack leader of the Irish wolf pack. She wants to get her body of work together in one room to show her father with the hopes to make him proud. One of her pieces bring her to San Francisco. That piece brings her to Jack MacGrath... It's your paranormal version of "Romeo and Juliet". Jack was a great character... he's charming, sweet and sensitive. The writing seemed a bit dated... but you got the point the author was trying to make. As this is the second book of the series... it could be read as a stand alone... (I know, I just did it!) I would recommend this to anyone who likes a quick, shape-shifting read!
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text 2015-08-23 14:28
Series, New Releases: August 24, 2015 [Headless Cover Day?]
Beauty and the Werewolf (Entangled Covet) (San Francisco Wolf Pack) - Kristin Miller
KAGE Unleashed - Maris Black
Blood Sky (The After Series Book 4) - Traci L. Slatton
Source: www.fictfact.com/BookReleaseCalendar
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review 2015-08-16 00:00
Beauty and the Werewolf
Beauty and the Werewolf - Kristin Miller Beauty and the Werewolf - Kristin Miller This is the 2nd book in the San Francisco Wolf Pack series. This book was much better than the first. A lot more depth, emotionally as well as story wise. Isabelle Connelly's character is caught between a rock and a hard place; one being her Alpha wolf father whose battle with a rare form of cancer is coming to an end and the other Jack MacGrath, a reclusive lone wolf with no Luminary mate, so his lifespan is just about up.

She has trained all her life to take over the pack. But her passion has always been her art, something that her father never appreciated nor encouraged. Her successful secret life as the artist Bella Nolan is unknown to most. It's her last chance to show her true self to him. So she plans a private showing of all of her works and is now tracking them down to add to her display.

Jack has spent the last 20 years staying high on adrenalin just so he can add on a bit more time. His love for art has been a source of comfort especially the works of Bella Nolan. He has 12 in his collection, the last one won in a bidding war between him and Isabelle. But a single touch gives him back the hope he had lost of finding his Luminary. In spite of the obvious attraction and the possibility of love Isabelle's loyalty to her pack is unshakeable and she refuses to even consider a mating. The MacGraths and Connellys are rivals, enemies even and her father will never give his consent for their mating even if it dooms Isabelle's fate to the same one Jack is currently facing.

ARC provided in exchange for an honest review
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review 2015-07-31 00:00
Beauty and the Werewolf
Beauty and the Werewolf - Kristin Miller Beauty and the Werewolf - Kristin Miller It was a fun read. I liked the story line and all the characters. Story flows smoothly and its hard to put it down once you started. There are many humorous scenes as well as romantic ones. It depicts struggles of a woman who is desperate to get her father's approval, and he is very difficult man to please. On the other hand there is Jack, he is fighting to stay alive, unless he finds one person he can bond with. For him Isabelle is the "fated one". Now he must convince her to choose him over her father and her clan...
For paranormal lovers this book is a real treat. I enjoyed reading it and will recommend to my reader friends.

P.S. I received a complementary copy of this book
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review 2014-10-11 03:54
Brief Thoughts: Beauty and the Werewolf
Beauty and the Werewolf - Mercedes Lackey

This was certainly not the best of the Five Hundred Kingdoms series, but (in my opinion) it was one of the better ones (even though it is the last one). As it stands, the previous book in the series The Sleeping Beauty is still my favorite.  This one would come as a not-so-close second.

 

Bella Beauchamps is your typical Mary Sue heroine with modern-day ideals living in a fantasy era of fairy tales during historical times.  She is described as being a little unconventional as compared to the rest of "society", but that's because she's intelligent, thinks outside the box, independent, and a take-charge type person... as opposed to the Noble Court doormats that the rest of the girls in the book are described as, apparently... or something like that.

 

During one of her visits to Granny's house, she is attacked by a werewolf and bitten on the ankle.  Following, she is whisked off by the King's guards to be imprisoned in Redbuck Manor to learn that the werewolf who had bitten her was none other than the Duke Sebastian who is also a wizard and an ally of the Godmothers and a hermit.  Of course, as far as fairy tales go, Sebastian's werewolf transformation is a conundrum because he did not acquire his problem the traditional way (being bitten by another werewolf) and so now there is a big wide research and investigation going on with all magic folk to figure out what happened to him.

 

As for Bella, she is to remain in Redbuck Manor with Sebastian for monitoring until it is proven that the werewolf bite won't also turn her into a lycanthrope.  As a spin on the tale, Bella is also recruited to aid in the investigation to determine the cause of Sebastian's sudden transformation into a werewolf which is most probably a curse (a fact that is pointed out at least twice before we finally confirm it).

 

It's a different twist on the Beauty and the Beast story, I'll say; and a promising one at that.

However, I can sum up my thoughts on Beauty and the Werewolf with four simple points:

- As is with Mercedes Lackey, the book is written well. There are randomly spread out highly amusing quips, the narration is smooth, the story progression is good, and the tale was not bad.  Unfortunately, the telling of the tale is very emphatic about pointing out points that the reader could have deduced easily... but just in case you can't, let's keep emphasizing the points until you're certain you've got the point... repeatedly.

 

(What the heck happened, Ms. Lackey?  The last book was so good!)

- The characters were good characters... but that's pretty much it about them.

 

Bella was your typical independent, "I can manage by myself and I'm better than everyone else" heroine, who is practical and ultra-Mary Sue.  To be honest, while I like that Bella is intelligent and able, I think we maybe put too much emphasis on her personality and her modern femme fatale traits; in the end, they didn't seem to be significant.  (By the way, did I mention that Bella is unconventional and is described as "not fitting into the norm of girls in the story line's society"?  Because I don't think the book mentioned it enough...)

 

Sebastian was adorable in that dorky, "I'm not an alpha male, but you love me anyway"... way; I certainly loved him and found his nerdiness endearing.  But that's about it for him.

 

The rest of the characters were simply... there.

- The story line was a good attempt at retelling Beauty and the Beast with random scatterings of different other beloved tales to spice up the background (Red Riding Hood, Cinderella or whichever other millions of fairy tales that involve an "evil" stepmother). Unfortunately, even with Lackey's own spin to the story, it was extremely predictable and hardly worth much of a thought.

- The only mystery to me were the invisible servants; I found myself wondering about them a lot during the story. However, I probably wouldn't have thought much about them if the story didn't lead me to wonder about them in a rather pointed fashion. The fact that the invisible Spirit Elementals were acting out of the norm had been brought up so many times with so much emphasis that you couldn't help but start thinking about them. The narration was practically screaming, "Hey, think about THIS plot point! It's not really that significant in the long run, but it's here and it's something to think about and you need to wonder about it!"


Conclusion: Three "good" points plus a random pointless point really just makes a mediocre book for me since there was nothing outstanding about this book. It was enjoyable and not at all bad, but still a bit "meh".

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