![]() This was never dealt with, and her despair over her "wickedness" became boring. Compounding this, Adelaide's endless capacity to forgive this whiney, self-absorbed arsehole who spent a lot of the book blaming others for the things that went wrong in his life was infuriating, as was her self-loathing for her "lustful" impulses. Certainly, one with more strength of character. I really felt she deserved a better man than Nick. She had gone through a great deal, much of it very traumatic, and all of it the fault of the hero, by the way. His lack of self-awareness and plain idiocy at times, when shit was bleedingly obvious, did get very annoying. I cannot say that I liked the hero, Nick, at all. There is quite a backstory here and a lot of it is in the previous book of this series, but I think one can read this without having read book 1. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |