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Levi Black has mostly recovered from the events of a year ago. The only lingering effects are that he's much more well known in York than he'd like to be, and he's a lot more cautious about walking around his house naked. However, those events brought him the capricious and fascinating Blue, so he's not complaining. On the contrary, he's happy, in love, and looking forward to Blue finally moving in with him. And if sometimes he wonders what Blue sees in a boring cartoonist, he keeps that to himself.Blue Billings is finally ready to throw off the memories of his past and move in with the person who means the most in the world to him. His psychic abilities have grown in the last year to his mentor Tom's consternation, but Blue is determined to look on the bright side. He's also focused on ignoring all the warning signs that he's received lately. However, even deeply buried secrets have a way of rising to the surface. And when a surprise from Blue's past turns up and draws them away to a lonely house on the Yorkshire moors, Levi and Blue must fight for their survival once again.From bestselling author, Lily Morton, comes the second book in the Black & Blue series. The books are intended to be read in order.
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3 primary books4 released booksBlack and Blue is a 4-book series with 3 primary works first released in 2019 with contributions by Lily Morton and NOT A BOOK.
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Another slightly disappointing sequel. I immensely enjoyed the first novel because it had a very classic ghost story mixed in with a very cute and fun new relationship between Blue and Levi. I think this story was just a bit too ambitious. It's very obviously based off of stories like “The Haunting” where a bunch of strangers are put into a very haunted house and the eccentric millionaire owner sets them through some tasks, that are then thwarted by the ghosts, to see who will be around (and alive) at the end. Morton also threw in some lore about very real The Hellfire Club. It got just a little too crowded with both too many characters and ghosts. I was glad for more Tom as he seems like a really fun old man but didn't understand the point of the addition of Declan, especially as Blue doesn't really get anything out of him and in the end he seemed like he was just cannon fodder anyway. A lot of these scenes could have been cut, like the Lady in the Lake, and replaced with more about the history of the Viscount's family and the house instead of just referring to different deaths. As many other reviewers have said, Blue and Levi also have a slightly different personality. I don't think Morton spent enough time developing them and maybe got them confused with different characters she's written or just didn't know what to do with them. Levi especially seemed like a completely different person from the first book and they didn't gel as well together.
Overall, I did like the story and found it entertaining but not as a sequel to a book I thoroughly enjoyed. If this was its own book with totally new characters, I would frankly have less of an issue.