Friday, March 11, 2016

Review of Grayslake: More than Mated by Celia Kyle


I received this book as an ARC for an honest review. 

Did you miss any of the books in the Grayslake series then this is the box set for you. Read them all in order and find out how the Adams boys have to screw up before they are able to win the mate that is destined to spend all their life with them. Don't count these woman out though mated or not they are tough cookies. They will not only stand up to their man but also to any threat that might come after those they consider family or potential family. 

Each book will have you hooked from the first word to the very end. You will find yourself cheering for them one moment and wanting to smack them along the back of the head the next. Each of these couple though alone or as a couple will have decisions to make and they don't just involve them being together. 

In the 5 book though we get more of Reid Bennet's story and we find out if 1) he will find his perfect woman & 2) if he manages not to screw it up. Reid is not in Greyslake but investigating another clan when he is turn on his heals by what is happening there. Reid just had to figure out if he can control himself long enough to set things right. Evelyn Archer knows there must be more to life then this horror that the people of her clan are living through if only she could get the help she needs. The problem is will anyone help her to stand up to the people that are ruling by fear. 

This book shows us how far Reid has come since leaving Greyslake and maybe how far he will have to go yet. This book will hook you like all the rest but in this one you might want to bring the bad guys back to kill them again and again. This book you will find that you might be emotionally pulled unlike the others in this series. I would recommend this box set it needs to be on everyone's must read list.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Review of Protected by the Mountain Man by Khloe Summers

  I received this book with the understanding that I could leave a voluntary and honest review.  In this book we get Lark & Clive's ...