4 out of 5 stars
I didn't read the description of this novel before plunging ahead with it, so I was surprised to be reading about a new assortment of humans and Others. I like them every bit as much as the original cast of characters.
How many women have been gaslighted by abusive men? Vicki DeVine has been criticized and berated by her jerk of an ex-husband for so long that she is beaten down and has internalized his poisonous lies. She believes that she is unattractive, stupid, and useless. She doesn't trust any men and can be induced into a panic attack by even mild criticism. Nevertheless, she has been successfully updating the property that she received in the divorce settlement and is on the way to reclaiming her life. Until her sleazy ex decides that he wants the lakeside property back and sets out to bully her into abandoning it.
What is Vicki to do? Thankfully she has a crew on her side—her friend Julian, the bookstore owner; Wayne Grimshaw, a reassigned highway patrolman; another businesswoman in town; and, most importantly, a large selection of Others. One of the Crowgard has been renting from Vicki, getting to know her and approves of her approach to business and life. Vicki is surprised when one of the Sanguinati appears and tells her that he is her lawyer.
I wonder if Anne Bishop or someone close to her has a history with abusive men. I certainly have secondhand experience of it. The women in one half of my family were programmed by our grandfather to accept controlling men as a normal part of life. As a result, I really empathized with Vicki and I was cheering for her supporters as they protected her.
Two books in this series to go. I'm very much looking forward to them.






