2021 Review, of Second Edition:
** I WAS GIVEN THIS BOOK FOR MY READING PLEASURE **
Lust and other Drugs, by T.J. Nichols
Mytho, Book 1
★★★★★
258 Pages
3rd person, dual character POV
Themes: romance, shapeshifting, creatures
Triggers: mentions of drug taking, addiction, violence
Genre: MM Romance, LGBT, Urban Fantasy, Shapeshifters
World-Building: ★★★★★
Heat: ★★★☆☆
Chemistry: ★★★★★
Plot: ★★★★★
Romance: ★★★★☆
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INTRO
I originally read the first edition of this series (books 1-2, at the time) in November 2019, but it's been a while and I've read a lot of books since then. Although I remember certain scenes, characters and events, I was a bit vague on the story as a whole, so I can confidently say that I went into this second edition with fresh eyes.
And...I still loved it. I still stand by my original review (after re-reading it, before writing this) and I loved that I was able to both fondly remember the series, as well as have that rare experience of reading it for the first time again. I can't pinpoint how or why that feeling was possible, but I honestly felt like I was reading it again for the first time, and that everything was new and amazing.
CHARACTER
The story starts with Jordan – a detective who is denying his addiction to a mytho drug, Bliss. The way his addiction is explored, with Jordan denying it, justifying it, lying to himself, convinced he's not an addict, is smart and realistic. Jordan is an emotional softie, a top who feels unwanted because he likes to wear lace, silk and make-up, with a history of bad relationships where men reject him once they find out about his likes.
Then we're introduced to Edra – a lesser dragon mytho who lost his mate during the collapse, ten years ago. Now, he's alone, clinging to his traditions, where he was called a Knight, and was considered the mytho version of police, protecting his city. Now, he does the same job, at Mytho Servo – the public service office of mytho, who try to police mytho. It's Edra's job to clean up as many messes as possible, so that the police don't get involved. There's no trust between the mytho and police, leaving Edra playing devil's advocate half the time, while working on a shoe-string budget.
A tricky case comes along, just as Jordan has returned from undercover work on a black market illegal trading case. With no other cases, Jordan is landed with the mytho case, and steps on a few toes when he starts suspecting and investigating humans of committing crimes against mytho. With no one ready to accept mytho as victims, or even humans with rights, Jordan's poking around gets him noticed by the wrong people.
With an election on the horizon – one pro-Mytho advocate against the current anti-Mytho mayor – Jordan doesn't want to be stuck in the middle. But when he crosses paths with Edra, who is trying to clean up the mess of the case, it's an instant clash. Leading to gradual respect, grudging trust, and two men working together who have the same goal of solving the case. The attraction is fought on both sides, but eventually can't be denied any longer, and leads to a long, slow burn, intense chemistry, and a sizzling connection that lasts the entirety of the book.
PLOT
The story deals with a crash of two vastly different worlds – one human, and the other full of mythological creatures from fairytales. When they collide, it's a political nightmare, and humans – as usual – react badly.
The way humans behave towards mytho is very reminiscent of so many historical events that it's both frightening, but also shows the author's skill in weaving real human emotions into an urban fantasy story. When the mythological creatures appear, humans treat them as lesser beings.
As usual, humans played scientist and screwed the Mytho world, bumping two worlds into one and destroying the other. Instead of accepting their error and working together, they did what humans always do – they blame someone else. The fact most mytho are animal-based creatures let the humans slap the “monster” sticker on the problem, justifying their bad behaviour. The poor mytho – their world destroyed, their traditions treated with contempt, and some hunted for sport – are expected to shut their mouths and tolerate it, since they don't have any rights anyway.
The way this was all woven into Jordan's work as a police officer, and Edra's work as a Mytho Servo liaison, means that we get to see the multiple, cruel ways the Mytho are mistreated by humans. Everything from internment camps, segregation, prejudice, violence and no legal rights, are explored through their work, naturally exploring the reality of life as a mytho rather than rushing to list and info-dump them.
Using the Prologue to explore the crash of worlds, how it came about and the consequences, sets up the worldbuilding well, while leaving the rest of the story to add the intricate details seamlessly. This Prologue is both clever, in that it gives a quick but condensed view of the collapse, while also being useful in introducing the reader to the background without inserting info-dumps into the main story. This allows the main story to focus on the details, the characters, and the main plot, expanding upon the world formed in the Prologue.
WRITING
I've been a fan of T.J. Nichols' style of writing and storytelling for years. This one is no different. Even though this was an ARC, I think I only saw one or two small errors that will inevitably be cleaned up before publishing. I did see one inconsistency, early on – at the den, Edra tells the satyr to ride him, but during their encounter neither 'ride' the other, unless the mytho have another meaning of the term that's not explored. Other than that, it was brilliantly clean.
The plotting was clever, the pacing well done, and the storyline engaging.
The criminal investigation takes centre-stage, while the relationship is secondary, but it never feels like one is ignored in favour of the other. The two are woven together well, using the case to throw Jordan and Edra together where their chemistry fizzles on a slow simmer.
Though it takes 89% for any intimate contact between Edra and Jordan, there's a logical and plot-driven reason for that, and I loved how it added an extra bit of tension and anticipation to the story. Edra's aversion to kissing, and Jordan's slow exposure to mytho life, history and traditions, made for a constantly engaging romance. Jordan had a lot to learn, and Edra tried to make allowances for the differences between them. As the older of the two – at 130+ in mytho years – Edra constantly tries to be the wise and logical of the pair, while Jordan is more driven by his emotions.
There is a definite series ARC – the relationship between Edra and Jordan, as well as the political tightrope between mytho and humans – but each book has a singular criminal investigation that is wrapped up by the end of the book. While it makes a great individual novel, it also makes it more exciting to binge-read the series and creates anticipation between novels.
OVERALL
Lust and other Drugs is a clever, engaging novel with a well-rounded plot, an intriguing investigation, and a relationship with so much chemistry it sizzles right off the page. Jordan is endearing, Edra protective, and both easily relatable despite Edra's mytho status. The story revolves around a cleverly paced and plotted investigation that keeps you engaged from the start, with enough clues, hints and politics, to keep you reading right until the very end.
The addition of Jordan and Edra's chemistry, their personalities and individual quirks, make them just as interesting on their own.
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Favourite Quote
“Everyone deserved justice, even if they had fur and fangs.”
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Original 2019 Review:
T.J. Nichols never disappoints!
This was such an intriguing concept. The worldbuilding was amazing, the plot original and unique, and the characters entertaining and lovable right from the start.
Jordan is a cop with a personality, who likes to wear a little lace, lipstick and silk lingerie at home and on the weekends. While undercover, he discovered the Mythos drug Bliss and became mildly addicted. Edra is a lesser dragon who was a Knight in his own world. When the world crashed into the human world, he got stuck as something unwanted, relegated to a social services style organisation where he can maintain his Knight over-view of the Mythos creatures. Their jobs soon overlap.
There's a handy little news/historical Prologue that sets up the background of the worlds colliding so that you can enter the story without a lot of info dump. It lets you know how the worlds came together, that things are hard and far from settled, and hints at the challenges to come.
Together, Edra and Jordan were amazing! Both so unique, individual, and interesting. Jordan's natural fears and struggles to assimilate the two sides of his personality - the cop and the one that liked pretty things, like lingerie and make up. Edra, a creature out of his own world and treated like a second-rate animal by humans. Their chemistry was off the charts from the start, but I also kind of loved that the whole story wasn't just about their relationship.
There was some sex on page, but it wasn't together. It happened to show you their personalities and their lives before they began to feel anything for each other. Their relationship together was much more complex, subtle and VERY slow burn. But I loved that. I loved that it didn't progress too quickly, because that wouldn't have been right for the characters. And the moments Jordan and Edra did share positively SIZZLED.
I loved every second of it. I can't wait to read Book 2. I love that it will continue the story of Edra and Jordan, rather than introducing two new main characters. I can see these will be going on by paperback bookshelf alongside the Studies in Demonology series.