When I first read the synopsis of this book I thought it sounded interesting, when I first saw the cover art, I thought it was one of my favorite covers ever!
Now I've read the book and while I thoroughly enjoyed it, I'm sad I'm done!!! Good thing I can reread it any time though!!!
I loved the character of Killian, who is in a tough position in the witch community, as the most powerful male witch, he's expected to marry an equally powerful female and procreate - the fact that he's gay and wants to experience love is apparently irrelevant! He is called a wuss by the witch council as he has no interest in "power" as something to rule over people, he comes across as a gentle and loving man.
Blaine is the man he has a hard time resisting, a regular human and professor of quantum physics - and if there is one science that could probably understand magic, at least eventually, it would be a quantum physicist!!! Blaine is out, open, and clear in his feelings about Killian, and keeps pursuing him no matter how much Killian runs - even when his running is because of a misunderstanding!
Lavender is Killian's intended bride and a strong character in her own right, in love with a supposedly "normal" human, which is Jimmy Janx, a favorite student of both his professors - Killian and Blaine, but all is not as normal as he thought either, and his only stress is not that his girlfriend's father hates him and plans to marry her off to someone else, but he may not be alone in his "freakness", as he thinks it is, after all!
And in the midst of all this, there is Aloysius, a very wise and powerful cat/familiar who is partnered with Killian early on, but is his compass and his friend.
I thought the dynamic of Killian trying to resist Blaine was interesting enough, but the additional plot points of the power struggles of the witch council, the prejudice that is unearthed, not be fearful humans towards witches, but fearful witches to each other, why the council is so adamant Killian and Lavender must be married - not surprisingly, a perceived sense of power and then how Killian, who had been written off as merely a pawn in all this and not as strong in his magic as they think a Witch Master should be, comes into his own when the one person decided to use Blaine as "leverage" to get him to do what they wanted him to do, but the reaction was not what they expected.
And on top of that, Killian is the one who really brings the witch community together with what he discovers of their ancestry.
I loved it, I think this is my favorite Tara Lain book so far! I have a few others of hers to read, but this was a fantastic story!