This is a story of merpeople living deep in the ocean. The mermen were hunting two creatures that attacked two ships that night. One ship is modern, with all the latest technology. One is all wood, and the people are dressed in home-spun and such. When people fall overboard and are drowning the mermen can sometimes save them. They have a directive to try to save the women specifically. On this night three women are saved by the mermen, and brought down to their home. The story explains that often the humans do not survive the decent into the abyss. It must be something special in that liplock that not only gives them air, but protective qualities to survive the pressure.
The mermen group cannot breathe air, so can never go ashore. Their home is more on the primitive side in most aspects but have wonderous marvels of technology at the same time. You expect a group that has been excluded from our developing society for thousands of years to have evolved differently. They have very few women and use nymph dolls for their sexual needs. Caderyn, a merman, rescues Bridget, a marine biologist whose dream is to study deep ocean species. The story follows their romance and eventual marriage. The Olympians are another group of merpeople, merwomen. They are a bit aggressive. They can breathe air and like to sing and lure ships to their doom. I would want to know more on why these groups splintered, they obviously need each other to breed. How can one breathe air, but not the other… When humans remain in Atlantis for a period of time, they become one of the merpeople, grow gills and such. Makes sense for survival, but how and why does this happen?
I have some concerns. Bridget cannot remember their initial sexual encounter which lasted a week. Not a fan there. There are other areas that do not logically work. However, if you suspend logic and need to know the why and how, and take the story at face value, it is a good story. I found it interesting, and am looking forward to the next book in the series. Narrator was good.
I received a free copy of this book and am voluntarily leaving my review.