Really? The series arc concludes here with all the action scenes happening off screen until a single
30 second scene at the very end where the villain appears, utters a line and is vanquished. Ugh.
Because urban fantasy is merely the window dressing through which we view the romance and squee.
The comedy is silly and juvenile, with lots of sex jokes and slapstick shenanigans from hellhounds and dragons. The schtick wore out its welcome by the second book.
Thus, at this point, they were eyeroll inducing … and not in a fun way.
Once again, the romance features centuries old beings who nonetheless behave like teenagers. Compared to the previous couples, sorcerer David and elf Caolan have slightly more screen time devoted to getting to know each other before the sex happens. This author’s formula for romance and sex
just aren’t my thing and I only finished the series because I already had them all in my TBR stack.
I will not be moving on to the author’s spinoff series.