I made the mistake of reading this book first before reading Light Switch, the book that introduces Scott. Even though I understood the plot and grasped the character's histories, I felt I missed some crucial backstory information. For that reason, I highly suggest reading Light Switch first.
Overall, I enjoyed this book. I did have issues with Scott's abundance of polyamorous and D/s relationships. I love polyamorous stories, but I prefer the individuals involved to be committed to only each other. Scott had two different polyamorous relationships. One with the two main characters, Matt and Kristen, from the first book Light Switch, and another with a married women (her marriage came first). Not to mention, the two subs he plays with on occasion. Why he needs these two additional subs is beyond me. The two women he's in a polyamorous relationships with are also his subs. He then agrees to help his ex-girlfriend, Meredith, heal from an abusive D/s relationship by becoming her Dom. Adding yet another women to the mix. He's trying to help her, I realize that, and still very much in love with her, but he has sex with her only hours after seeing her again. He never once thought about or considered his two committed relationships or if they would be okay with him having sex with yet another women. I thought a committed relationship meant you didn't sleep around, but that doesn't seem to apply to Scott. He gets his cake and eats it too. (I can't help but wonder if this issue isn't addressed in the first book and explains why his definition of commitment varies from mine)
Other than that, I really liked Scott's character. Really I did. He's a fantastic Dom and a sweet, caring, and passionate man. His love and devotion to Meredith was awe-inspiring (he loves Kristen and Amy, but not like he loves Meredith) and his willingness to sacrifice his own emotional well-being to help her brought tears to my eyes.
This book deals with major abuse issues and the author doesn't shy away from what happened to Merideth at the hands of her sadistic Dom/ex-husband. It was jarring and upsetting to read what her husband put her through. I had such admiration for Meredith's character by the end of this book. She really is a remarkable character.
Reconstructing Meredith isn't one of my favorite books, but the sweet ending and likable characters put a smile on my face and made the book worth reading.