3.5 stars.
Jehenne Corbeaux has had anything but a normal life. As a child, strange things seemed to happen around her and her nights were filled with terrifying visions. Her family and the doctors do their best to dissuade Jehenne's "delusions," and they succeed for a time, but as Jehenne begins to reach adulthood, it all starts coming back...
After a family fight, Jehenne decides she needs a change of pace and visits her Grandmother in France. While there, Jehenne finds that maybe when her parents called her Gram a witch, they weren't waxing metaphorical.
Jehenne is tossed into a world where fairies, elves, witches, and yes, vampires really exist. If this weren't enough, Jehenne learns that she herself is a witch with extraordinary powers, oh, and she might also be the reincarnation of the scary-as-all-get-out Vampire Lord's long lost girlfriend....and that's only the tip of the iceberg. Jehenne is now a 'key' piece in a rivalry that has spanned thousands of years, as well as being a pawn in a game of gods, spirits, and paranormals. Jehenne undertakes a journey to find herself whilst protecting her loved ones, but will they do the same for her?
Cons
1. When I first started this book, I was a little put off by the choppy way things seemed to progress. One scene led to another with very little to tie them together. The beginning of the book feels more like a jumble of ideas that were tacked together but not fleshed out. There are several jumps from day to night and from thought to thought that are jarring. Luckily, the second half of the book gets a grip on itself and seems to know where it wants to go.
2. There were several things that happened in the story that felt like they should be significant, but never lead to anything. For example, the first scene is 7 year old Jehenne being forced into a "treatment" by her mother and doctor. The doctor thinks the treatment is to extreme for Jehenne, but Mom is determined. We never find out what the treatment was or anything else about this period in Jehenne's life. I suppose the author could have written it simply to show the audience that Jehenne's mother was ruthless in her desire to stamp out Jehenne's witchy predilections, but it seemed like such a big deal and then it was dropped. This happens enough times that while I was reading I struggled to clue into what details were of import and what were not. Things that hold the familiar ring of foreshadowing lead nowhere, and not in a well-crafted purposeful way. To be fair, this is the first book in the series, maybe the rest of the books will go back and address some of the things I thought were dropped.
3. This is my biggest frustration with the story: No one tells anyone else anything. It's pretty typical of the genre that the characters keep secrets and there are misunderstandings, but there are just SO many! I felt like I was getting emotional whiplash from all of the times the main characters hid facts, felt betrayed, and then had emotional melt downs, and they all came one after another without more than a few page buffers. It was a constant I love you, no one explains anything, I feel betrayed, I leave you, and repeat! I wanted to throttle the characters every time they were asked a straightforward question, and instead of answering it they said, "You'll see..." No, that hasn't worked out the last 20 times you did it, clearly this method is not effective and it leads to someone getting hurt, getting mad, and then leaving and saying they'll never come back. I wanted to yell multiple times: "JUST START EXPLAINING THINGS TO EACH OTHER!" I understand the need for mystery and drama, as well as the need for the characters to come across as rounded and emotional, but I think the miscommunication, betrayals, and yes I'll say it, hissy fits, needed to be cut down by at least half. It made the main characters feel like they were too dumb to survive the hectic lives they led, which didn't match up with the personas being woven by the rest of the story. I really do like the characters, but they are short on common sense.-P.S. on this one, you can only use the "will they, won't they?" so many times before it gets old too.
4. I ADDED THIS AFTER READING THE REST OF THE SERIES: The books get super rapey. Not even just "bad guy rapey," but fetishized "she says no but thinks yes, so it's okay" rapey. It's disgusting and the rest of the series deserves 1 star because of it.
Pros
1. Like I mentioned above, the second half of the book is well fleshed out. The story gets pretty intense near the end and it really drew me in, despite the frustration I felt towards the characters obtuse and emotionally-stunted reasoning towards each other. The book really starts to flow and hits it's stride. I think that this book sets up the next book to be far superior, and I look forward to checking it out.
2. The romance is oddly sweet. Frustrating, but sweet. While I may have spoken against the emotional outbursts of the main character, I also feel like she is justified and somewhat relatable in ways that many heroins are not. The romance is the typical "I'm the alpha vampire and I know what's best and will keep everything a secret," but at the same time, the heroin is very focused on making her own choices, I may not agree with those choices, but I approve of the idea that she's not going to blindly submit to someone just because they're sexy. I also like that the love interest vampire isn't a total masochistic jerk. While he follows hard and fast rules and has that edge that paranormal romance audiences love, he's toned down and not emotionless or cruel like many of his counterparts in similar stories.
3. It's diverting. I'm not saying it will win a bunch of awards, but it's a pretty cool idea and it looks like it's going places. The premise really pulled me in and as the story progressed it made me feel like I wanted to know what would happen next, and that's it's own kind of good writing.
I would recommend this book to anyone who wants some quick paranormal-romance that has the potential.