Witch Fire
First, take Witch Fire for what it is.
This book has no aspirations of changing your world view, the author
isn't trying to sneak her message in under the guise of a plot. There
are no sinister fiction-world repercussions for the ills of today.
What there is between the covers of
this book is Mira, a woman just out of a bad divorce working as a
waitress trying to get her life back together. And there's Jack, the
smoking hot, rich, slightly sinister man who rescues her from an
attack, tells her she's a powerful air witch and then also dumps on
her that there's an evil organization trying to kidnap her and
sacrifice her to summon a demon.
This book of Wiccan-flavored urban
fantasy is also very, very hot. The lust easily overpowers the action
and quite honestly, can make a girl feel like a sex-crazed teenager
again. There's just enough action to give readers a break from the
flaming hot romance and sex angles. The emotion and characters are
well defined and interesting. The magic is a bit more vague, both
encompassing Wicca and expanding on it, and while consistent
reminders that Mira is "rare" and "powerful"
could push a reader's limit, but it's still far more balanced than
other books on the market.
Summed up, this isn't a book that's
going to revolutionize fiction, but it is a pleasing, blazingly
erotic way to spend an afternoon or two.
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