Jack Frost has spent his entire existence questioning where he fit in. A Keeper with no holiday or reason for being, a darkness inside of him that he can’t begin to understand, causing Jack to be unsurprised when the other Keepers appear to have all but given up on him.
Nick is used to bringing joy to others, he is Santa Claus after all, but where his mate is concerned, he just can’t seem to get it right. When Jack becomes the sole target for their enemy, Nick will stop at nothing to keep his mate safe and prove once and for all they are meant to be.
With the story coming to an end, join the Keepers as they discover not only who they truly are, but what they are capable of...and just perhaps, what the future holds.
Jess Buffett was born and raised in New South Wales, Australia. Jess is a mum of two, married to her high school sweetheart. She is a hopeless romantic who is a huge fan of M/M and M/F romance with a happy ending—anything with hunky men in all their glory, whether they be Shifters, Vampires, Cowboys, or the boy next door. A caffeine addict who shamefully can’t make a decent cup of coffee to save her life, Jess believes in soul mates, happily ever afters, and in love at first sight, but that sometimes people need a second or a third for the brain to catch up.
I loved Jack’s Claus by Jess Buffett. It is officially my favorite story in The Keepers series. Jack has been maligned by those he thought were friends. Someone was powerful enough to make him do things against his nature. And his mate not only failed to support him but failed to find out why. But did Jack allow that to destroy him? Hell no! I loved that Jack struggle to believe he was a valuable and necessary member of the Keepers but refused to give up hope. He was beaten until he was bloody both physically and mentally but he refused to allow the darkness win. Nick knew that he had failed his mate. I adored that he was determined to not only rectify his mistake but show Jack that he was forever in his corner. I again chuckled as Ms. Buffett turned the stereotypical vision of Santa Claus and Jack Frost on its head. She gave us sexy, alpha Nick, also known as Santa, and young studly Jack. However she then took it a step further and made the two mates. And while we knew they would have their happily ever after Ms. Buffett threw twists and turns that were unexpected. Ms. Buffett out did herself with this story. It was well written and full of emotional depth. She gave us two strong male characters that had to fight for their future. As well as friends who learned a hard lesson but were still able to laugh. Suffice it to say I thoroughly enjoyed the journey Ms. Buffett took us on.
Yeah this book is for Jack Frost and Santa Claus who at start this book finally get their act together and become mates.
Throughout the book the war between the fates working with Famine are attacking the Keepers and Dark Lords they even get inside their headquarters which was supposed to be impossible.
They battle before Jack gets kidnapped again taken so he can release the other three horsemen, but thankfully he's stopped by the others. Though he got away yet he has claimed his birth right becoming a horsemen again instead of a dark lord.
Elpis the goddess of Hope has some things to answer for since Jack is her son with Grim Reaper. Something that Famine discovered that was supposed to never be know. She saved her son who had been slowly being weakened by the hourglass that was stolen in order to open purgatory.
It didn't work and at end the book it was Christmas eve. I enjoyed this and loved all the sex for sure. Was funny moments and Jack was once again apart of a bigger family. I just wish I knew what was going happen with the loose ends that aren't tied up. Especially Famine escaping.
The best of the set, but honestly not that great. Nice (but very fast) resolution to the root problem they faced, and good HEA, truly awful proofreading and grammar.
Nice story. I woul look at Santa in a different way from now on. Liked them both but I would have loved to know more about their history and why they had problems to begin with. Enjoyable.