For as long as she’d remembered, she always did just as she was told. She listened to her father and honored her mother. She attended church every Sunday and Wednesday and used her days off to spread the teachings of the bible. Her plans of reaching the inhabitants of a rural cabin come crashing down when her car breaks down, her phone dead and the rain pounding down on her. She’s stuck -- stranded in a dangerous wilderness with no hope of escape.
Luckily, the three men in the cabin are more than willing to help her. Except they’re all drop-dead gorgeous, and the cabin is close quarters. Heather needs to try her hardest to be the very best girl.
An atheist, a Satanist, a Pagan, and a Christian -- can she save her soul from their sin, or will they win this game of conversion?
An automatic star up for the (relatively) nontoxic depiction of a poly situation. Some additional/clearer explanations of compersion would have been nice to have, especially since many of the other (valid!) points the book was trying to make were of the preachy (pun intended) variety anyway.
The language works fine, surprisingly even in sex scenes (most of the time). I have no reference point to judge the americanisms, though, so taking those at face value. I didn’t catch any typos, but then again I was reading this in a state of complete exhaustion, so probably would have missed them anyway.
Plotwise not much in here, the beginning was clunky af and the ending I can’t make my mind up about… Sort of respect the no-apologies-stopping-here-because-real-life-works-this-way approach, but a part of my brain is naturally shouting for a proper ending. Uh, yeah, no - leaning towards this counting as a positive. But ask me again in 30 minutes…
A short-story-length quick read, but am still thinking about it a few days later, which is always a good sign. And now after typing that, I am tempted to rate this at 4 stars, but, but.. No plot :(