Letting go

Letting go

2014 • 342 pages

Ratings2

Average rating2.5

15

Books, Coffee & Passion

I fell head over heels for the description of the book in Maya's website, I mean who wouldn't? A book about a man that has been in love, for year, with a woman he couldn't have because she was his best friend's wife, has epic romance written all over it! Maybe my problem with this book was exactly my high expectations.

So, Joss lost her husband, Carson, three years ago in a accident and she finally decides to move on with her life or may I say her sex life. Anyway, she saw herself as a submissive and had fantasies about being dominated, so she ends up bumping with Dash in her first visit to a BDSM club. And Dash is a dom, of course. Not much of a surprise but that scene was written perfectly.

After that moment, I kept getting the feeling the story was going around in circles, it was like the book collapsed.

Joss gave in pretty quickly after Dash confessed he always had feelings for her. I mean, your best friend's husband, who you were never ever attracted to in any way, confesses he always wanted you and suddenly, BAAAM, you're attracted to him too? It could work if Joss was 16 or so, but not like this. Maybe Dash should have been forced to fight for her a little longer at that point. But then it got worse, even though they jump fast into moving together, Joss spends a lot of her time thinking about her dead husband. I think the only times she didn't think or mention Carson was when she was having sex with Dash and all this Carson mentions/thoughts were frustrating. And then, Dash,who desperately wanted Joss for years let it all fall down with a conflict that could have definitely been solved when she was at the hospital. The book was well written but I had to remind myself, constantly, that this was a Maya Banks book, it just felt too repetitive to be hers!

I hope the next book in this trilogy gets better, I really liked Jensen but I bet Kylie is going to be as annoying in her own book as she was in this one.