A Shiver of Light
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Did I read the same book as the readers who gave five stars?
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Tanya
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rated it 1 star
Jun 05, 2014 08:09PM

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What's really sad about this is most authors read reviews and try to improve from them. Where is Hamilton doesn't. I read that she doesn't believe in reading them, so unless she wavers the no edit clause her next books will be exactly the same, and that is really sad because I did love this series up until this last book.

Me too, I had actually missed when one of the main characters was killed off because I skimmed past it. It was a shame that conversations went on for pages and pages in the story but a death scene didn't?

I totally realize that post-baby hormones can leave a woman so out of control emotionally, but those hormones seemed to also be affecting every male around her, including even Aisling! I kept reading because I really expected to find out eventually that someone had put some kind of emotion spell on everyone.
There were also so many issues that were left up in the air with no resolution, with a cliff-hanger feel to the ending.


To me it seemed like she couldn't be bothered with writing the characters normal personalities.Most of the them seemed to all blend into one in this book. They didn't have individual personalities they all seemed the same person to me.

I did give her early books high ratings, but I have to agree with you about the last few books.
I had also noticed how she had turned the complaints of too much sex and not enough plot into the readers fault for being too prude. (Judgmental much?)Or anyone who gives a bad review she calls a troll. A good author will read the good and bad reviews and try and improve from them all. Not just dismiss them as being the readers fault.
I like a good sex scene as much as the next reader but not chapter after chapter of the stuff. I like a good plot to go with it. It bugs me how in most of her stories the characters will be faced with a major crisis and instead of worrying about it, or facing the issue they stop what the are doing to have sex? I am starting to think that maybe she does not know how to write anything but sex, this books is a good example seen as there is hardly any sex but there is also still no plot. Just a bunch of characters talking non stop.

Dear Lord, enough with the friggin' recaps and repetition of the obvious!
What happened to the interesting plot and dialogue that drew me into this series in the first place? I think that once LKH discovered that she could get away with writing soft-porn she gave up on actually crafting a compelling story.

Dear Lord, enough with the friggin' recaps an..."
I have to disagree. I think as soon as she discovered everyone needs therapy and have multiple partners she went down hill.
Her two series are converging into the same story and theme.

I'm sooooo disappointed with this book, it made me feel nauseous to have to read the same bullsh*t over and over and over again :-(


books are becoming like movies throwing as much sex and explosions as you can to make a buck or ride the wave of the first successfull books of the series.
with movies i usually expect the sequels to be crap, and it used to be the opposite with books.
does no one have any pride in their craft anymore?


OMG! I thought I was the only one who felt like the characters weren't the same. I couldn't connect with them the way I had in the previous books. This was so badly done.



THAT would actually be nice, but I don't believe it's true *sigh*

I couldn't even start to explain it. I didn't finish it. I have NEVER done that before. I must say, I used to love LKH. I used to find her interesting and insightful. Her descriptions used to sum up my thoughts in different circumstances. There was always a small moment of clarity in her books, or when she spoke, but it's become barely a slither these days. A shame really. She really needs someone to throw her work back and say no, start again. This book was terrible. Terrible. I wish it didn't have her name on it.

Personally, my favorite in the series is the third one, with the huge battle at the end. That I think was the highlight of the series.
As for this book, I ate it up in a few days as opposed to reading it in one sitting like I normally do. And man..... last night when I read the end. I sobbed hardcore. I hadn't ever had a book effect me like that. I still don't want it to be true. Im thinking his namesake saved him though because of where they were when he was taken away from us. Anyone else get that feeling? that maybe there is hope?
Also, I wish I could have seen more resolve on the D-bag Taranis. F that guy. Reminds me of my Ex. And reading through Merry has actually helped me become more brave at the the thought of him. She always did that to me. I looked up to her from highschool. Im sorry you guys didn't like the book. I enjoyed it. I hope the next one she steps up her game and accomplishes something. I have personally never read the AB series and don't plan to. So I don't have authority to comment on their comparisons.

If you are a Merry fan this is a book that you will want to add to your collection, if not don't bother. It is not a for anyone looking for great suspense or literature, it is for anyone wanting to know what has happened next in the lives of the Merry and her men and her pregnancy. The book is written along the now familiar lines of Laurell K. Hamilton. There is plenty of build-up in the beginning, some sex, and then a quick ending and a wrap chapter or two. It is like sitting down to a restaurant meal and taking your time through the appetizers, salads, entree and then the waiters are throwing the chairs up as you are trying to finish your coffee.
The babies finally arrive, but I am not going to spoil it for anyone interested. I just wish the pacing in this was a bit different and that the action was fleshed out rather than almost left out. sigh...(less)

Until about 30 pages left,it was rather boring with inklings of something to come but never did, then the incident with one of her guys, and then things were wrapping up.
I do want another book in this series. Or maybe, more of a extension of this book to see what the babies become.
I've read all the Anita Blake books and agree that the sex overtook the story, until the last few books when the story took back over. The over-description of the guys hair just doesn't seem to leave.

and the only character besides maybe Doyle who actually has some depth she kills... ARGH!
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