Magic is real. A dragon wants her dead. Is this a nerd-girl’s dream … or worst nightmare? Cincinnati, Ohio. D&D gamer and comic-book fan Sassy Kincaide knows her life isn’t exactly normal. But when she’s attacked by a demon hired by a dragon, it turns out all that fantasy stuff she loves is real … and incredibly dangerous! Worse, the Smaug-wannabe – who is running for Congress, naturally – has ordered a hit on her, and he will not stop until she’s dead.Fortunately, a mysterious organization that believes she’s some sort of prophesied Chosen One wants to help. Teamed with an irresistibly sexy half-incubus, she struggles to learn how to slay a real dragon. Armed only with a power she can’t control, her geek knowledge, and a metric ton of smack-talk, can she avoid getting barbecued – and sleeping with her new partner – before all Hell breaks loose in the Queen City? Sleeping Dragons is the kick-butt first novel in the Sword & Sassery urban fantasy series. If you like strong women, magical mayhem, and thickly sliced snark – you’ll love Phoebe Ravencraft’s action-packed tale.Buy Sleeping Dragons to slay the beast today!
This book had all the right elements. Solid plot, decent character development, humor, sexual tension, hints of romance, and while it wasn't super shocking at any point, it wasn't overly predictable either. It reminded me a lot of Lost Girl but with a bit less emotional depth. The issue isn't development of emotional profiles, it's that the entire story is from the POV of a character that rejects getting close to anyone. Family, friends, mentors, allies, doesn't matter, she keeps everyone at arms length because she refuses to deal with her own issues. But this doesn't evolve or change, despite some characters saying and doing all the right things. Hopefully this is addressed in the follow up books. This was an overall excellent intro to a series though. I'm absolutely going to keep reading. My favorite thing is the main character is realistically selfish, without being unlikable. She's absolutely easy to like and root for, but she's not the pure hearted innocent girl next door. She's already a warrior, already strong, already forging her own path, and she's got issues and flaws. She's a very realistic character.
I enjoyed the idea of the book, the overall theme, the character backstory, even the unique play on the romantic triangle. Now I wouldn’t say any of it was executing correctly but thats not even my biggest complaint.
Yet none of it can redeem a truly crappy protagonist. Sassy? More like the worst hate-to-love character blended without the whole love portion. There was more redeeming characteristics in all of the side characters and the protagonist didn’t seem to have anything going for her.
I wish that I wasn’t obsessed with finishing a book once I start.
Too politically correct angry bi sexual politically correct heroine got old fast
I didn’t manage to actually finish the book. I was tired of the angry bisexual black feminist politically correct diatribes before I managed to get 1/4of the way through the book. I read urban fantasy for a plot not your politics. Lost me as a reader.
(FYI I tend to only review one book per series, unless I change my mind on a series, so want to change my scoring by more than 0.50 of a star. -- I tend not to read reviews until after I read a book, so I go in with an open mind.)
Interesting idea but I didn't like any of the characters.
First time read the author's work?: Yes
Will you be reading more?: No
Would you recommend?: No
------------ How I rate Stars: 5* = I loved (must read all I can find by the author) 4* = I really enjoyed (got to read all the series and try other books by the author). 3* = I enjoyed (I will continue to read the series) or 3* = Good book just not my thing (I realised I don't like the genre or picked up a kids book to review in error.)
All of the above scores means I would recommend them! - 2* = it was okay (I might give the next book in the series a try, to see if that was better IMHO.) 1* = Disliked
Note: adding these basic 'reviews' after finding out that some people see the stars differently than I do - hoping this clarifies how I feel about the book. :-)
Truly a diamond. Not in the ruff ♦. Just the right amount of sass balanced with enough realistic self doubt. Five is not enough but all they will allow me to give.
I saw the bad reviews and I thought ‘we need more black bisexual sassy MC’s.’ So, I read it… and I have to dnf it. Its first person pov which isn’t my favourite, the covers are very professional but the author is an obvious penname and I am distrustful of that, especially when they are portraying women or POC. But it’s the writing … her best friend is Felicia which just feels like a meme reference each time she says her name. And the over explaining… don’t tell readers who Obi-Wan is, they either get the reference or they don’t. She takes a katana to the public library!? It’s just a then this happened, and this, and this… what is going on, she demands. They tell her [info dump] then five pages later… what the hell is going on, she demands. And we get another info dump. And then she complains that they already told her that. Nope I cannot. Did not finish at 17%