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Le Fay Romance #1

Teeth and Tarot

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It’s not my fault, I remind myself. Daily affirmation.

Unfortunately.


Lance fled the comforts of his wealthy witch family a decade ago and has settled into a human existence. But the nightmares remain and drowning out the memories with clubs, hookups, and early morning coffee runs only helps so much. When he spots a hot stud as his favorite coffee spot, things seem too good to be true. His gut tells him it’s too good to be true and to not trust the man who calls himself Adam.

But a one-night stand can’t hurt. Right?

Like a curse he can’t escape, Lance is pulled back into the world of witches, werewolves, and gangs. For every person he has in his corner there is another working against him. Never mind his stud hookup-- who went and got himself bit by a werewolf. Forgetting things has never been easy and Lance isn't ready to just forget this man... even if keeping him close puts them both in danger.

Teeth and Tarot is the first book in the le Fay Romance series following a family of witches, though the books can be read as stand alone. Teeth and Tarot features a witch and werewolf relationship between two men. This book contains sexual content not appropriate for readers under the age of 18.

241 pages, ebook

First published January 31, 2023

38 people are currently reading
537 people want to read

About the author

A.A. Fairview

15 books57 followers
Arin was born and raised along the American east coast and has called the city, the shore, and the country their home. They've come a long way from writing anime fanfiction in their bedroom and even have a BA in creative writing. When they're not writing Arin enjoys playing tabletop games, drinking coffee, and collecting bits and bobbles. They currently live in Stephen King's backyard with their partner, cat, and lizard.

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5 stars
46 (27%)
4 stars
61 (36%)
3 stars
43 (25%)
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12 (7%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 36 reviews
Profile Image for Poppy || Monster Lover.
1,799 reviews500 followers
June 23, 2025
3.5 stars
I really liked Lance and his self imposed exile PTSD thing. He had depth as a character and I wanted him to find a HEA. Raegan was also complex but there needed to be some serious grovel that wasn’t there. The whole bogus reason for arrest thing, stalking…. I’m all for a villainous MC but that’s not Raegan was written to be. Some opportunities for important conversations were glossed over. All that said, I still thought they were a cute couple.

Spice: 4/5

Triggers: murder (off page), PTSD related nightmares, death, violence, gore, threatened SA, abduction, family estrangement, discussion of past divorce, making out with side character (MCs are not in a relationship), ritual sacrifice (off page), corrupt FBI practice (arresting for “assault of an officer” for minor accidental wound), discussion of homophobia, dubcon (initiating sex when partner is asleep)
Profile Image for Shelba.
2,693 reviews99 followers
February 19, 2023
DNF @ 61%.

This started out really promising. A self-exiled witchy boy. Werewolves. Organized crime.

Reagan definitely does far too much stumbling around in the dark for a FBI agent. Stumbles upon the shop, happens upon Lance & Dave. Is super not sneaking at the bar. Randomly sees Lance getting kidnapped, and even though he is on foot, he just somehow knows to head to the warehouse district and happens upon the motorcycles to find Lance. But, whatever… I could have turned a blind eye to that.

But it all started to fall apart for me around 40%. Reagan gets bit. Which means he will either die or become a werewolf. So, off to the safe house. The first 3 days are apparently the worst. I say apparently, because while we are told this, Reagan was no worse off than you’d be with a mild case of the flu and he didn’t experience any of the heightened emotions we were told he would. It’s just really glossed over caretaking and mild horniness. A waste of forced proximity. And this goes on for 20% of the book. There was no urgency this whole time. They spend a week hanging out in a safe house.

(And apparently no one cares that Lance has been missing work for a week and that a FBI agent has gone AWOL).

And then there is the romance. This isn’t insta-love, it isn’t a slow burn. It’s an out-of-left-field love. I don’t understand when this went from “hey your hot, but you arrested me, lied to me, stalked me, and then got your dumbass bit” to love. Lance is thinking about their future together, but like, you’ve fucked once, a week ago and have just been holed up playing twiddlywinks for the past week, while a coven and a werewolf gang are probably making a mess of things elsewhere.

Even the promise of knotting, cock warming and ritual mating isn’t enough to keep me around.

Also some editing issues, like “site” instead of “sight”, “day’s” instead of “days”, the odd missing word, etc.
Profile Image for ila.
236 reviews1 follower
March 5, 2023
rating: 4 stars
2,839 reviews3 followers
January 14, 2024
some nice elements but story goes downhill fast

Rating 2.75
This is their first series and it has some nice elements to it. The premise of a male witch, a twin, from a wealthy criminal family who’s now estranged from their father. Lance le Fay is clashing with a human being, Reagan, over his family’s deadly illegal activities.
That’s only some of the storylines that author A.A. Fairview has at the center of this novel but those are interesting ones, and the initial chapters are good ones.

However, Fairview’s characters and plots also work against themselves in letting whatever potential they showed early on slowly be pulled away. As the plot develops, the narrative makes less and less sense and the main characters themselves seem powerless (literally ) and of the STTL variety.

A witch, Lance le Fay, who’s backstory is never really filled in, with minimal exceptions of an appearance by his “evil twin” and with no real magical abilities (or explanation of the magic in this world). However , as Fairview will tell us, he’s done “bad things” for his family. Why and how he was made to do them is never clear.

Lance hides in plain sight, keeps his real name, stays in the same town as his notorious family, is estranged from them, but expects them to show up any moment to drag him back into their nefarious schemes. Lance is that character that never makes sense, whether it’s his inadequacies as a witch, a son from a criminal family or a main character.

Next he meets and is suspicious about a gorgeous stranger he hooks up with in a bar. Naturally he has sex with him after taking him home (which he never does). Yes, this is an incredibly stupid idea.

But that’s Lance le Fay. The entire story all he does is react without thinking. He runs off, puts others in danger. Runs here, runs there. Never has a plan about anything. Leaves bar alone at night to walk home after his friends tell him it’s the idiotic thing to do because there’s been a bunch of people showing an interest in him. Every scene is Lance demonstrating he’s basically a TSTL character. That’s To Stupid To Live character if you didn’t know.

And for a witch, you can’t imagine why, because there’s no foundation for this aspect of his character. There’s one scene with him using magic that isn’t even remotely close to being impressive. A fizzle instead of an explosion. And that’s it. That and he reads tarot cards but doesn’t like the answers.

The other main character, Reagan (named after Ronald), is a hot mess, albeit a bit more interesting. But a hash is eventually made of him as well. Mostly because the author made him a straight FBI agent but then wrote the character as if the author had no clue as to what the FBI was , and that’s included the very nature of the role of a agent within the agency. That’s unbelievable, imo.

spoilers.

Reagan, the gorgeous hookup turns out to be a FBI agent, one specifically hired as a “honey pot” someone who lures in suspects with sex. Which , absolutely makes zero sense in law enforcement terms. But that aspect of his character and this story is weak and illogical in every way possible. He’s a straight, married man, able recently separated, but then has no issues with gay sex. He’s been selfish and self absorbed in his previous married relationship but shows no signs of changing until forced into a new relationship by means of becoming a werewolf. SMH

Furthermore, towards the end, naturally his FBI phone rings, his bosses/colleagues calling to check on their errant agent. Reagan’s response isn’t to answer the call but hand it over to another werewolf/friend of Lance’s. That being, then at Reagan’s request destroys the unanswered phone, with Reagan saying he will be fired anyway.

Right. Because an unanswered call from an FBI agent will make that agency automatically assume that agent has quit and will be living another life , with a suspect in that suspect’s apartment where they had him under surveillance. No paperwork, turning in equipment, badges, etc. No following protocol. Sigh.

And yes, Lance takes the newly turned Reagan right back to the exact same apartment that’s seen Lance abducted from (various bad guys) , under surveillance ( his criminal family and the FBI), but no problem, why move?

From a potentially good start to a story that went straight downhill with ever increasingly outrageous plot lines and silly elements to a HFN that just made one shake their head.

The second book in this strange series is a different couple, female/male relationship, but no matter, I’m stopping here.
Profile Image for rowan.
254 reviews9 followers
November 24, 2023
Why I read it: Kindle Unlimited, babey! Also, witches and werewolves, how could any of that go wrong? (Also, that cover art, oooooh man.)

Thoughts: For some reason my kindle highlights/notes aren't porting for this title, so you can't bask in my wit. If I had to sum up my feelings on why this book only gets 2 stars from me, it would be "It's not you, it's me. But it's also you. (Who am I kidding, it's mostly you.)" That's henceforth also going to be my shelf for books that are rated higher on GR than I expected. This one's sitting at 3.85 and for what? Y'all are just too horny, I swear, dropping them 5 stars at the very mention of knotting. Either that or otherwise I just don't understand romance novels anymore.

This book was A Lot nearly out the gate for me. Lance, one of the POV protagonists, runs into a hot guy at the cafe across the road from his place and he runs away in a panic because the guy might be sent by his evil father/evil family, and he goes home and... does a tarot spread. Okay, cool. He's a witch in a setting where the occult is real and divination is his Super Special Power Thing, so the tarot reading is reliable. But it also seems like a lot of fuss for a guy he saw once at a cafe for like a minute. I wish he'd gone into more detail about why he's so instantly suspicious. The vibe is that he wouldn't put it past his dad to try to honeypot him, but why? He never explains that, and throughout the rest of the book it turns out his evil family is happy for him to stay where he is as long as he doesn't spill the beans on their illegal mafia-type dealings to law enforcement. So what's the problem? Has Lance been done in by a honeypot before? He's apparently quite the slut or whatever, but he doesn't suspect any of the other guys he takes home on the reg?

Of course, this one time it turns out his suspicion is correct, because the hot guy at the cafe turns out to be Reagan (yes named after the president, they talk about it, it's one of the book's funniest moments), and he's also with the FBI. I laffed when the content warnings for the book included "MC involved in law enforcement (FBI agent)" and then I felt bad because it's not out of the realm of possibility that someone might need that warning, I guess. But if this guy is a Fed, he must be the worst fucking Fed. His plan to bring Lance in is absolute shite, he does whatever he wants, he stalks Lance even when he's been explicitly told he fucked up and he's not to even look Lance's way again, and eventually ends up in a situation where he gets turned into a werewolf and has to drop off the radar while wolf puberty does its thing. Of course, while he's at the werewolf safehouse he doesn't go to work for like... a week? Nor does he ever let anyone know where he is (why? would the evil werewolf gang overhear a phonecall somehow?). He definitely doesn't still have a job by the time he comes out. And for someone who tanked his marriage so he could stay with the FBI, he does not seem to give a single flying fuck about his job once he meets Lance.

And speaking of the FBI... I'm much more familiar with Australian law enforcement and I don't know how things are in America, but I'm going to just guess that an arrested suspect can't just leave the interrogation and the building just because the suspect's evil twin busts in on the interrogation and goes "Don't say another thing without a lawyer!" Like, the twin isn't the lawyer. He can show the FBI whatever paperwork he wants showing that the knife Lance used was an antique, but he still can't give legal advice. Lance is, of course, entitled to not say anything without a lawyer. But that means you get a fucking lawyer, you don't just fucking disappear.

The whole evil twin thing was ridiculous. I'm pretty sure he showed up just so Lance would remember the half-sister he and his twin found out about and visited once, and so that he would also visit her during the course of this book, and I'm pretty sure all that happened just to lay down plot hooks for the sequel. Either way, the twin is just there to be a shit and, one one occasion, blow knockout glitter into Lance's face. Lance and Reagan spend a lot of this book knocked out or kidnapped, btw, and it's as ridiculous as that sounds.

I'm also pretty sure this book mostly has werewolves for the knot factor. I've never read published fiction that involves knotting before (though I think I've read some fanfic; idk, werewolf/shifter/ABO stuff isn't my jam, too much gender essentialist power struggle crap), but I think knotting could be pretty hot (or at least it is in my imagination) so when I saw it in the CWs as well, I was kinda hyped, not gonna lie. And then it kind of... happened, but it was a letdown because of the way it happened. The entire romance was so rushed, towards the end I felt like maybe five chapters of the story were missing somehow, but that's just how the whole thing was, really. Lance saw Reagan one morning. That same night, he runs into him at a club, they flirt, he takes Reagan home and they sleep together. The next morning, Reagan breaks into Lance's super secret magic room and Lance accidentally nicks him with a ceremonial dagger he once killed a girl with (speaking of, Reagan got past the "btw I sacrificially killed someone once" reveal quicker than I did), so Reagan is like, "Ah-ha! You're under arrest for harming a federal officer!" and takes him in for that interrogation. That same night, I think, Lance is with his werewolf friend at the werewolf dive bar, where Reagan follows them, and where Lance then gets kidnapped by the bad guy wolf pack. That same night -- which is the second night that Lance and Reagan have known each other -- Reagan gets bit.

They go into the werewolf safehouse that night, and they stay there for ??? a week ??? I think, and that takes up most of the book. You'd think it would be the best part of the book, high drama, Reagan could die from the bite, Lance has to care for him because they're alone there, etc etc. But it's also the worst part of the book, hands down. Nothing happens. All the drama is so contrived, it becomes absurd. Reagan is never at any legitimate risk of dying, despite what Lance's werewolf buddies seem to imply. He just has some pains and aches for a couple of days, sleeps a lot, and then he's up and flip flopping wildly between horny and angry, and then he just evens out and it's never an issue again. In between both of them constantly noticing how Reagan is always at half-mast or whatever, they watch TV and eat and sleep. Lance also stirs up shit by bringing up Reagan's ex-wife and they have the beginning of an earnest conversation that goes kinda like:
"Hey so if things didn't work out with your wife (who you still carry a picture of in your wallet) because you weren't willing to risk your job to be there for her more, what makes you think things will work out with me (basically a stranger and the first man you've ever actually found attractive/slept with)?"
"Oh so I see why you're so hesitant about getting too close with me now, and I don't have a good enough answer for that yet, but I promise I'll think about it."

And I don't know if he ever does think about it, because then they just fuck anyway, despite both of them knowing better, and then Lance disappears to do stupid shit and then Reagan gets kidnapped by the bad werewolf gang. At this point they've known each other for a week, and the only thing I've seen them have in common is they like bad TV and drink their coffee with cinnamon -- which is what Lance brings up at the climax of the book, when Reagan is all wolfed out and he has to submit to someone (also a contrived and poorly explained/unjustified plot point). It's hilarious that he ends up submitting to Lance because Lance is easily the weakest character in the book, emotionally speaking, who only shows backbone because the plot demands it.

The saddest part is that in the last 30% of the book (showdown with the bad werewolf gang) I basically gave up and power-skimmed through it just to see if the plot ever regains momentum (it doesn't) and unfortunately it seems like the editor/proofreader gave up at the same time, because there were so many annoying errors throughout that last bit -- verbs suddenly changing from present to past tense, typos by the punnet, weird punctuation. If I'm skimming, I shouldn't be noticing errors, goddamn.

The only good thing about this book is that while I was reading about Lance being the worst witch ever (close to the showdown he tries to do some magic and it backfires so then he's just like "I take a second to think about what magic I'm actually good at," and buddy, if you don't know by now, idk what to tell you), I ended up picking up my own tarot deck. Shuffling cards and looking at pretty illustrations isn't a bad way to spend those long minutes throughout the day when my mind just wanders out and away from my body.

Would I read a sequel or the author's other works: Uhhhhhhhhh no. I'm good, thanks.
Profile Image for Elliott.
28 reviews
July 3, 2023
3.5 stars rounded up

A magical crime family, an estranged witch, a FBI agent-turned werewolf, an underground society of supernaturals, and a ~spicy~ gay romance—what's not to love?

Romance isn't my usual genre, let alone steamy romance, but TEETH AND TAROT was a fun read with an exciting twist of magical realism that I couldn't help but love. I really liked Lance in particular; he gives "sopping wet cat" energy and I love that in a man LMAO. Taylor, Daphne, and Sara were also really interesting and I would love to see more of their stories in future installations of this series. I think that, unfortunately, some of the structure of the book lacks foundation and there are parts that could have been more fleshed out: Lance and Reagan could have spent some more time wallowing in the complexity of Lance being Reagan's mark, and I really wanted to read more about the Le Fay family. I think the Le Fay's were the most interesting part to me, like, organized magical crime? That's SO cool.

If you like monster romances, TEETH AND TAROT should be on your TBR! And if you know me irl no you don't <3

Thank you to the author for sending me a free download of the book! It genuinely meant a lot to me and I appreciate the gesture SO much.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Littlebookterror.
2,325 reviews91 followers
March 19, 2023
Teeth and Tarot is the first book in a series and features a witch, a human who will soon be a werewolf, a little bit of mystery and a romance in its page count of 200-odd pages. What starts in a simple hook-up quickly gets complicated when Lance finds out that "Adam" is actually investigating his family.


What worked: The world - it's got all the fun things you expect, from tarot readings to vampires to werewolves, along with Lance's family being under investigation and magic hidden in plain sight. The mystery of Lance's past also kept me intrigued. It's not played up like a terrible secret but something he is uncomfortable with and would rather not think about that fits into the story. His interactions with his family and were really well done and showed a different side of his character than how he is around Raegan.
It's very readable, the dual POV keeps it interesting and the plot moves fast.


What didn't work: The combination of convenience and randomness in the plot. I can't quite explain what I mean without spoiling the entire book but I found Reagan's justifications for being in the places he was in to be flimsy at best (especially considering his job) and for some of the magical aspects to have no prior foundation to build upon. Everything about either the werewolves or Lance's magic is only explained when needed so you can't really anticipate or fear for the characters when you know the author can just make up something new if that makes sense? For example, the scene where Reagan gets bitten could have a lot more tension if Lance would have thought about the repercussions of that in an earlier chapter. reagan is almost too accepting of the entire magic situation in general.

And, surprisingly enough, the romance. While there is plenty of sexual attraction and the two get along nicely, I cannot say I actually felt the build-up of any romantic feelings. For example, the dynamic between Reagan and Lance after their hookup does not shift even after spending an extended amount of time together. It's just - suddenly there and I missed the progression. And since this was a big selling point on my part, it being a speculative romance...



It's a little unsatisfying that the initial reason their meeting even happens plays little role in the actual plot and is only brought up in the end to show that it's not forgotten (and will hopefully be addressed in future books?).




I received an advanced reading copy from the author in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Alice.
364 reviews
December 16, 2023
My Rating⭐⭐⭐⭐
Amount of spice:🔥🔥🔥
Explicitness: 🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️

Tropes & Themes:
❤️Witches and Werewolves
❤️Forced Proximity
❤️Care Taking
❤️Found Family
❤️Queer Romance

I enjoyed this book so much more than I thought I would! It was such an easy read and I flew through it. It was just the kind of read I needed at the moment. I thought this would just be a lot of spice and not much else but it was actually so much more and I absolutely adored the characters. There was a fantastic found family aspect and their dynamic was hilarious and so sweet.

It did feel a little bit like insta-love but the author really made it work and there was a nice build into the relationship. It was also pretty spicy and if you’re into a little bit of an omegaverse type of vibe then this might be the book for you.

I would recommend it if you want a side of plot with your werewolf spice or you love a found family and a witchy romance.
Profile Image for Paula .
11 reviews4 followers
February 1, 2023
An intriguing debut AA Fairview has given us the first installment of their la Fey series. This first novel, Teeth & Tarot follows Lance la Fey as he returns to the paranormal world he left behind years ago. A heated encounter with a “hot stud”, a dangerous pack of werewolves and a found family, gives Lance the confidence to confront his criminal family.
I thoroughly enjoyed this book and will likely read the next installment. I liked the focus being on the romance while also having a good plot. The characters were funny (Sara) and I enjoyed how this author used more Hollywood type werewolves that stood on two legs instead of four. Daphne & Taylor were great supporting characters and really helped sell the found family trope. The spice level based on the number of scenes was ok and not excessive, definitely not the spiciest I’ve read but the scenes did well in selling the romance and driving the plot forward. These can be some of the most difficult scenes to write so my rating is not heavily influenced by that. I’d like to see how this aspect changes with more experience, though I was far from disappointed in this book.
However it did seem a bit rushed to me. The relationship between Lance and Reagan could have developed a little more gradually as it seemed abrupt- Lance practically hated Reagan (excluding their initial meeting) until he suddenly didn’t. Some elements were glossed over that could have added to the book if they’d been fleshed out. Some more background for the characters, such as with the la Fey family would have added more depth to the story. On that note, I wanted more interaction with Lance’s family either positive or negative.
Overall I’d give the book 3.5 stars and will continue on with the series.

*I received an arc from the author and am voluntarily leaving my review*
Profile Image for Guilherme William.
141 reviews5 followers
October 20, 2024
This started off really well. The premise with the Tarot was kind of interesting and well put together for a change, and the initial twist really left me wondering.

But this story just didn’t managed to make all its end’s meet. The characters kept making dumber and dumber decisions that go totally against their backstories. Lance is supposed to be this guy who spend years looking over his shoulder, and yet he simply can’t accept company to go over someplace without being kidnapped. It’s duble bad for Reagan, who is supposed to be this ex-military FBI agent, and yet keeps making terrible decisions, getting outmanned and completely deserts his job with no second thought.

The whole werewolf plot really derailed the story. It sounded promising at first, but it started to fall apart once Reagan was told everything and was like “guess this is my life now”

It also doesn’t have a compelindo ending (yay!). Almost none of the plots are solved and many are just discarded (Reagan just never addressing his former life, including a very important job, family and the whole nine yards).
Profile Image for Melissa Polk.
Author 11 books70 followers
May 13, 2023
*incoherent flailing*
Hi. I love this book.
Okay, I was hesitant to give it a go and I can't really say why. Some stupid ingrained bias, maybe? Because I've had my fill of Arthurian retellings? So glad I ignored myself. This book was *amazing* and, let's be honest, not a retelling at all. Lance was easy to love. Reagan took me a little while longer but only because I needed time to take his measure. The plot had me guessing and I'm excited to see where it goes in future books. Honestly, I'd love a book about Jason. Or a prequel about Taylor and Daphne. Ugh. Look. I just love all the characters, okay? Definitely making my top-books-of-2023 list, that's for sure.
Profile Image for Miranda Sapphire.
Author 10 books99 followers
February 7, 2023
This one was a table flipper--by which I mean the characters were so cute and funny I felt the urge to flip several tables over the course of reading this to work out my cuteness aggression. There were some rough spots here and there, but overall I absolutely adored it and appreciated an authentic representation of tarot. I cannot WAIT to see where this series goes from here!

The humor was so good, the characters were adorable, the vibes were excellent. I am trash at reviews but I know what I like and I liked the butt off of this 💜
Profile Image for Rishika Aggarwal.
Author 2 books35 followers
August 5, 2023
This is a very readable book.

With a fast-moving plot and I'm kind of interested in the world that Fairview is creating. The magic system he mentions promises to be interesting if/when it's built up more, and what little we get to know in this book definitely kept me interested throughout.

I also enjoyed the characters. Lance is a very believable character and I appreciate the way that his relationship with his family is handled - making it clear that there's trauma and history there without forcing him to address it too often in the book. His friends accept the fact that he's left his background behind and don't bring it up.

Lance and Reagan's relationship is cute, and the smut was well written and kept me giggling and kicking my legs throughout.

That said, there is a lot that didn't work for me as well. While the magic system and worldbuilding is promising, it's very underdeveloped. The beginning promised a lot - a magical crime family! werewolf gangs! - but didn't really deliver on that. I'm really disappointed at the lack of background and involvement of the Le Fays in particular, because magical crime family is one of the themes that initially drew me to the book.

Reagan's also pretty terrible as an FBI agent, in my opinion, because it seems that everything he manages to do is a matter of luck and convenience in terms of the plot. Additionally, while I enjoyed the smut, the love story suffered from a lack of build-up - they went from a ONS dealing with some pretty traumatic events to dreaming about the future in the blink of an eye, without much transition at all.

I also felt that the plot was a bit weak, because a good 20% of it after Reagan is bitten is spent on...well, not much, actually. The plot is very basic and linear and could have been developed further, in my opinion.

2.5/5 stars for me, rounded up to 3 stars.
Profile Image for Fionn.
9 reviews
August 2, 2023
*incoherent noises*
I thoroughly enjoyed this book and the world that it is setting up, and the tail ends that could lead to something more. Supernatural creatures being a part of the modern world, but also not quite? gimme.
Both of the main characters are extremely enjoyable to read and the POV chapters rest nicely in a place where each point of view is covered in a moment without jumping around too much. The side characters are also incredibly likeable for their own reasons.
Some of the plot points, and where characters are at times are a little convenient but it also keeps the plot going so for a shorter story, it works.
The authors humour rings through the writing and between the characters views, as well as some witty banter I very much caught myself smiling and laughing while reading moments. The interactions between Lance and 'Adam' are truly fun and also heart wrenching at times, I'd love to see how it develops further with more werewolf lore.



I'd love to see more of this couple and VERY excited to see more from this author. First person perspective is a personal hit and miss, but this is a real hit.
Profile Image for Lizs.book.nook ||Elizabeth||.
1,390 reviews47 followers
February 7, 2024
I absolutely LOVE this book! A.A. Fairview had me completely consumed from beginning to end. I wholeheartedly adore Lance and Reagan! They are two of my favorite characters ever. Their connection is just so deep and soulful. The way they just click is so beautiful to watch. Despite where they started, where they end up is exactly where they are supposed to be. This story was captivating from start to finish, from the major plot points to even the most minuscule of details, I couldn’t put the book down. I fell hard and deep for Lance and Reagan, but also secondary characters like Taylor, Daphne, Sara, and even Jason. Just…bravo!
Profile Image for Marie.
Author 23 books66 followers
February 11, 2024
Such a fun story

This was a fun romp that checked all the boxes for what I look for in a paranormal romance. Flawed characters with a sense of humor, fun banter, crazy shenanigans, adventure and magic, and disaster gays. The smut was sizzling, the pace fast. I truly enjoyed this book and can't wait to read more from this author.
Profile Image for :3.
34 reviews1 follower
April 28, 2024
GOT ME KICKING MY FEET FR LOOVED THIS BOOK!!
I usually dont often go for fast paced books as the time lines can be confusing and sometimes too fast, which it is a taaad crazy to fall in love in a month but i digress, i loved lance and reagans story, and cant wait to read more about the le fays in the next book!!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Jas.
39 reviews
June 2, 2024
I loved this book! It was a cute read, love the character’s and their stories and their love story. A nice slow burn with a perfect ending. I’m a sucker for werewolf stories, and I found this story taking those elements of werewolf ideas & putting it into the story. Love the artwork at the end. Recommend to anyone who wants a quick, but good, read.
13 reviews
July 16, 2023
A nice sweet story that also lays the ground for future angst

This was a good witch and newbies werewolf story but I did think they moved too quickly to being in love for my taste, especially the circumstances to how they met.
Profile Image for Macks.
98 reviews
November 20, 2023
this book was fun.
a lil spicy and sexy with interesting supernatural elements.

it reminded me a lot of the green creek series.
found family, witches and werewolves and vampires.

just another reminder why indie books are the best!
Profile Image for Anomaly.
13 reviews
February 16, 2024
What a fun romp this was! I enjoyed the dynamic between Regan and Lance, as well as how snarky Sara is toward the main characters

This is great for a debut book, so if you're interested in werewolves and witches romance, start with this one!
222 reviews
March 28, 2023
I wanted so badly to love this more. It's well written and fun, but so many plot points are kind of just forgotten about or don't follow through enough. I loved the characters however!
Profile Image for Dorian Valentine.
Author 6 books77 followers
August 15, 2023
Loved every page of this. Teeth and Tarot was a quick read that I adored. I can't wait to see where this series goes!
Profile Image for Kylie Corley.
243 reviews22 followers
March 29, 2024
Not too shabby for a debut. I give it a 3.5, but I'll round up to a 4. It's pretty basic, nothing too spectacular but kept me interested throughout.
Profile Image for Timyah Gaines-George.
89 reviews17 followers
June 21, 2024
So stinkin CUTE! Loved it from beginning to end. Can’t wait to see what book 2 holds for the supernaturals 🥰
Displaying 1 - 30 of 36 reviews

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