Overall: 4 stars*. Mythology/paranormal/historical erotica with more interesting and better developed characters than the first book in the series (and, yep, lots of sex scenes).
*4 stars for what it is: which is a bonkers, self-indulgent sexy romp
To give you a quick summary so you don’t necessarily have to check my review of the prequel, Nicholas: this book is about men in 1820s Italy who shapeshift into double-dicked half-goat satyr men during the full moon. Yep. There’s an “ElseWorld” of Greco-Roman creatures trying to invade Earth, and our hero, Raine is one of the satyr brothers protecting Earth. The plot is bonkers and silly and, in my opinion, a great deal of fun, but YMMV.
I rated this entry in the series higher than the first because I think the characters are more vividly drawn. Jordan, an intersex woman (technically a magical hermaphrodite in the Greco-Roman sense: she’s not fully human and has magical powers, in addition to mixed genitalia), is our heroine, and I loved her courage and how the story really gives her a lot of agency and control in her sex life, once she escapes her abusive captors at the story’s opening. There’s also discussion of gender identity and roles, as Jordan has been forced to masquerade as a man due to her genitalia, despite her identity as a woman: the hero, Raine, is wonderfully accepting and loving, so no worries there (all misgendering and exploitation come from villains). I wish there had been a liiiitle bit more exploration of this theme, but still I think it was well-incorporated for a historical setting.
The hero, Raine, feels less well-developed compared to Jordan, but I enjoyed him as an example of the “cold and grumpy, obsessed with protocol” Mr. Darcy sort.
Overall, I think readers who enjoy Ice Planet Barbarians and werewolfy sorts of paranormal romance will enjoy this book, but please do know that the heroine is intersex and don’t go in with hatred glasses on, mmkay?
Heat Level: Super explicit. Mostly vanilla consensual scenes but the hero is a were-satyr man with funky junk, so yeah.
CW: Rapey villains (plural), exploitation, misgendering, and abuse of intersex character (by the villains), forced sex work/sex trafficking