***4.5 Bars***
We meet back up with Nate in Every Love. From losing Arion, to an overseas tour that left him with nightmares that he can't shake, Nate has been through the ringer. I wasn't too big of a fan of Nate in the previous books. He wasn't my favorite character, but I was intrigued enough to want to read Every Love. I am glad that I did, as I feel that this was the novel that really took a look into Nate's life, and how he became who he is now. There was no turning back for him when he lost Arion, and Every Love really shows that as we venture with Nate down his new life from being overseas.
Nate has found an Arion look-alike. What else can he ask for if he can't have her? Sleeping with her makes him forget, just for a second, that she isn't Arion, and he isn't suffering. When tragedy strikes close to home for Nate, he spirals, momentarily into the nightmare that was once his life. Flashbacks of being captured, haunt him on a daily basis. From walking down the road, to finding his mother in a condition he never wanted to find her in, he can't shake the feeling that Arion was potentially the one that held him together.
When Nate makes the decision to move closer to be with his mother while she is in rehab, it isn't any shocker that he meets what could be the last woman he could end up with. Elaina, the stunning realtor that seems to know what Nate is going through on the relationship front, tears his mind away from everything when he's with her. Could she be the missing link to his nightmares? To the endless suffering that accompanies PTSD?
LK Collins did a fabulous job bringing Nate to her readers. He was very well written, and his agony over having PTSD is real. Anyone that suffers from PTSD themselves, or knows somebody that does, should know that it is not an easy "disorder" to have. She portrayed PTSD in a very good way that brought Nate to the reader, and in a very vulnerable state at times, too. The other characters, Elaina, his parents - all really connected well, and helped the story flow forward. There were really no loose ends, and it was refreshing for that to take place.
Definitely recommend reading Every Soul, and Every Heart prior to Every Love. The story line follows each book!