Blurb:
Lucas Thorn wasn’t born a cheater. All it took was a single moment—say, a certain disastrous incident on the night before his wedding—and boom. Reputation destroyed forever and always. So now he owns it. He has a lady friend for every night of the week (except Sundays—God’s day and all), and his rules are simple: No commitments. No exceptions.
But a certain smart-mouthed, strawberry blonde vixen is about to blow that all to hell.
Avery Black has never forgiven Lucas for cheating on her sister. And suddenly being forced to work with him is pretty much a nightmare on steroids. Of course, it does afford her the opportunity to make his life as difficult as possible. But no good revenge scheme comes without payback. Because he didn’t become the Lucas Thorn without learning a few things about women.
Now Avery’s lust for vengeance has turned into, well, lust. And if Lucas stops cheating, it’s definitely not because he’s falling in love…
My Review:
3 stars — I received a free copy through NetGalley in exchange for an honest and unbiased review/opinion.
Oh dear. I’ve had a hot and cold relationship with books written by this author. I’ve read books that I really loved, but I’ve more often read books that just rubbed me the wrong way. Strangely, this one wasn’t a full on hate, but it’s just not a Lenore book. It’s not that I can’t see why people would enjoy it, it just wasn’t a good fit for me. I have a few other books by this author that I’ll give a shot, but I think I’ll steer away from her normal contemporaries, or romantic comedies, b/c I just don’t think I have that sense of humour.
Oh, and yeah, this was kind of a weird one to request for me b/c cheating is one of my button issues (I just don’t have a good tolerance for cheating in books, and it will likely make me dislike a book), but I thought perhaps in exploring the topic it wouldn’t be too bad. And actually, the cheating wasn’t the part that really didn’t work for me. The author didn’t delve as deep into the reasoning as I had hoped, but it still addressed some interesting questions.
So what didn’t work for me? The humour in this book was cringe-worthy. I’d been telling my husband about it, and quite honestly the two MCs were just too over the top for me. So much yelling. There’s quirky characters, and then there’s these two…particularly Avery. I cringed through parts of this book. It was like watching Meet the Parents. I could understand why people would find it funny, but I just couldn’t. And quite frankly, I ended the book and I couldn’t help but think that if these people existed in real life, the people surrounding them must be so exhausted.
And the crazy humour kind of got in the way of their chemistry with each other. There just weren’t enough moments that got to my heart and made me feel for them. And for *this* particular reader, that was a shame. I like my humour mixed with more depth I guess. I would see glimmers, and then one of them would say something outrageous.
Now don’t get me wrong, it’s not that I didn’t laugh at all in this book, or that I didn’t enjoy parts. But I just got tired after awhile. I guess I just do better with moderation. *shrugs*
Oh, and on a strange side note, the author would use dramatic periods in weird ways. You know, where someone is trying to emphasize their point and so they break. The. Sentence. Up. But she would use them in places that didn’t make sense, at least to this reader. Was I the only one that noticed that? And mostly in the beginning of the book too.
So yeah. I can see this book being popular, it just wasn’t the right fit for me.
[…] Cheater by Rachel Van Dyken – Lenoreo @Celebrity Readers […]
Damn, the blurb has me hooked but your review has me on the fence.
This might be one of those times where the things that bother me wouldn’t bother you though…
Yea, cheating doesn’t bother me as much as it does you.
[…] Cheater by Rachel Van Dyken – Lenoreo @Celebrity Readers […]
[…] Cheater (Curious Liaisons #1) by Rachel Van Dyken — And this one is kind of like the Tara Sivec book…it wasn’t the cheating that really turned me off, it was the over the top humour. See my review here. […]