Overall: 4.5 stars. A delightful slow-burn alien romance with a sweet alien hero and interesting alien culture. The spider-centaur alien man romance we never knew we needed!
Pros: First off, I reallllllly do not like spiders. I would never expect to like a hero like Ketahn, a spider centaur-man alien. However, the authors here have written a lovable, protective Tarzan-like spider-dude who was really a big sweetie. I wouldn’t say he was necessarily a “sexy alien,” but I understood the heroine, Ivy’s, physical attraction to him after the book’s slow-burn development of their emotional connection. Basically, out-of-context, spider-men are creepy; in the context of the story, he was a sweet, caring hero. I think it also helped that the book devoted the first several chapters to his POV and in developing his culture: the reader gets insight into his mind and personality as a character before really learning what he looks like from a human perspective.
The vrix (spider people) culture is actually really interesting, and I enjoyed the early scenes where Ketahn and Ivy are learning each other’s language and technologies. The way they slowly grow into friends and then lovers is lovely too. Also, this is just a very well-written book overall.
Cons: The reason this isn’t a 5 star read for me boils down to the heroine, Ivy. She comes off as fairly immature for someone who’s ventured into space as a colonist (she spends a lot of time literally shrieking about how plants and animals on Ketahn’s planet are “yucky,” gross, nasty, etc. Shouldn’t you be expecting to encounter weird alien lifeforms in this scenario??), and she does some “Too Stupid to Live” actions like peeing on herself rather than risk Ketahn see her urinate (1. He’s a spider man without human ideas of shame, and 2. Is peeing on yourself better?), wandering off when angry and almost getting eaten by a tiger monster, refusing to eat “gross” food when she’s literally starving to death, etc. Essentially, she’s really bad at survival when she signed up to be a space colonist, which presumably involves having some survival skills.
In addition, despite getting some flashbacks to character-building moments in her past, Ivy just doesn’t feel as well-developed to me as Ketahn does. Still, their relationship and his character in general are so enjoyable to read that they make up for Ivy being a weaker character.
Note: this is the first part of a trilogy, so it’s technically HFN with a cliffhanger, but I assume that it will wrap up with a HEA by the third book.
Steam Level: There’s only one extended sex scene in the last part of the book, but it’s pretty detailed and spicy.
I would never have dreamed up liking a spider-centaur alien romance, but this book was just a fun, quick, sexy read. If you like alien romances at all: give this one a try!