the fifth book in the outstanding black dagger brotherhood series!vishous's story and its goood!hot and absorbing!
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
122 of 138 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Both Amazing and Frustrating,
By
This review is from: Lover Unbound (Black Dagger Brotherhood, Book 5) (Mass Market Paperback)
Lover Unbound garnered an instant impression from me on ending it. It was a hard journey, probably the hardest book to read of the series for me. I thought Ward had wrung out of me all the rough emotions I could possibly feel with Zsadist's book (Lover Awakened), but oh, how wrong I was. My first impression? Well, it was a mixed bag actually: disappointment, utter joy, a bit of a depression in regards to some characters, smiles for certain scenes, heartfelt sighs for others...and a definite piqued interest for continuing with the series. A mixed bag to say the least--more like a salad in which some ingredients were found exceptionally tasty and snatched up, others a bit wilted and set aside for pondering.Vichous, resident IT geek and live wire (think the hand). He's had it tough the last several months. He's got some conflicting emotions to work through regarding his roommate, Butch, feelings he hates himself for. Meanwhile, the war with the Lessers isn't going away, but turning a corner instead into newer, possibly deadlier territory. Like all of the brothers, his life hasn't come without a price, and memories of his father's warrior camp impede his ability to heal on the inside. His way of dealing is to indulge some darker sexual preferences, but is it helping? When a Lesser roundup goes bad, V finds himself hospitalized, but in a human one where the brotherhood is in danger of exposure. There he meets Dr. Jane Whitcomb, a self-assured surgeon...his savior. If not for her, he'd most likely have died, so why not kidnap the brilliant doc to make sure the healing continues? There's something about her that sparks the "mine" instinct and V's not having it any other way. Only problem is there's this tiny little job he's got to handle for the SV and it may mean an end to what V wants and a beginning to what's best for the vampire race as a whole. Can V step down from what he wants? Is it really in a warrior's nature? Jane may have been more than he bargained for too, more than he can sacrifice this time. And for a brother that's made incredible sacrifices in the past, it just might be time to take a stand. First off, I agree with some of the professional reviews--this is not the book to enter the series on. If anyone starts off with it, they're doing themselves and the books a disservice. This series is worth reading in order from book one. Vishous has had quite the interesting development in the last four books (in order: Dark Lover, Lover Eternal, Lover Awakened and Lover Revealed). It's probably safe to say that many readers developed some expectations--who wouldn't with these vamps? They're exceptionally developed, larger than life (in our minds) and full of some very engaging emotions. I realized though, that in doing so I was putting myself and the characters in a corner. Realizing this didn't make me appreciate the ending any more, which is different. Hard hitting, heavy and raw. This book WAS raw, gritty and in-your-face. It's the BDB though, that's what we've been getting. The author has stayed true to the roots of the series in that regard. Did I wish it could have been different for the main characters by book's end? Big yes. Jane felt too rushed, but the circumstances in which she entered the series were rushed too, so it could be explained that way. Regardless, I wished for more from/for her, and I suppose that is why the ending disappointed me. To me, the ending left a lot of questions; ones I hope will be answered in later books. She seems to still have an important role by the ending, so that gives me hope. The romance was a bit understated compared to previous books--there's a lot of detail about John Matthew and his friends included, a great set-up for Phury's book (next in the series titled Lover Enshrined, June 2008). Secondary characters do play a bigger role in this one and those parts were stellar. Even Zsadist continues to develop beautifully--Ward's not done with the individual characterizations! This book explored some deep emotions and a new take on the way romance can be written. While the ending left me feeling unsatisfied, I'm still convinced this is one bold, gutsy and talented author, which only lead me to wanting one thing in the end--Phury's book. We meet his possible mate and what we find out about her and the culture she arrives from is not to be missed. Lover Unbound is going to sure-fire please fans, or put them in reserve and on guard. Oddly enough, it did both for me. Sounds like a success to me.
27 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
What a hot mess,
By SSG (Michigan) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Lover Unbound (Black Dagger Brotherhood, Book 5) (Mass Market Paperback)
A distressing misstep in Ward's otherwise addictive and enthralling series.What's wrong? Three main problems: 1. The main love story is rushed and unconvincing. Vishous, the Brother with the most fear of trusting others (after Zsadist), falls in love the fastest of all -- and begins to think "mine" after hearing only a few words from the heroine. Truly unbelievable. The Vishous in this book barely resembles the one of previous installments. 2. The cosmology goes entirely off the rails, with a rethinking of the major deity in the Brothers' world. The only problem: This new Scribe Virgin is so inconsistent, so egocentric and so unreliable that it is hard to imagine any group of thinking beings being devoted to her. And it is hard to imagine admiring and wanting to know more about beings who would want to worship HER. 3. The picture we see of the Chosen -- the daughters of Brothers and the servants of the Scribe Virgin -- is so misogynistic and so claustrophobic that it is impossible to imagine it coexisting with the Brothers' culture, in which their females are revered, protected and exalted. The two sides cannot have come out of the same values -- which suggests incoherent and ad hoc world-building on Ward's part. The flaws in world-building and the character contradictions with Ward's earlier books make me very worried for the coming books. Ward needs to step back, rethink the consequences of all her inventions and make sure that the next book is consistent with itself and the world she's built.
32 of 39 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Not good...,
This review is from: Lover Unbound (Black Dagger Brotherhood, Book 5) (Mass Market Paperback)
Wow, I can't believe I am writing a bad review for a JR Ward book. I have been such a huge fan of this series from the beginning, and have faithfully pre-ordered every book, but V's book feels like it was written by someone else completely. It was so disjointed and didn't flow at all. You could really tell that JR had a tough time with this book, and it feels as if she really didn't like V all that much.All through the series so far, V has been very uncomfortable with his feelings, especially where love is concerned, yet he falls for Jane almost instantly. I don't mean the whole "mine" moment, because I know that happens right away with every brother, but he accepted and embraced being "in love" without any inner conflict what-so-ever. And the woman he falls in love with just doesn't measure up. Jane is very underdeveloped IMO, and her actions don't coincide with her profession or her upbringing. She is supposed to be this stoic no nonsense surgeon who grew up in a rich unfeeling home, yet she speaks like some street rat and falls in love just as quikly as V does...wtf??? I don't even understand why they fell in love in the first place. Jane thinks V is hot, and V likes Jane's brain? And why is Jane so okay with being kidnapped by a bunch of vampires. If I was kidnapped by vampires, I would be freaking out, not exchaning quips with my captor, no matter how hot he was. And the hand job thing...what the hell was that about? V has just kidnapped her, he is her patient, he is a vampire ( which I feel that any sane person might need a little time to adjust to), she is supposed to be very professional, yet she gives him a HJ ( on the first or second day...can't remember) without even knowing his whole first name?? the whole relationship was not believable at all. I kept having to put this book down. It took me almost four days to read it, and pretty soon I was just skimming. The ending was really lame, but by that time I just didn't care anymore. I'm not invested in their relationship, so don't feel disappointed about the casper issue. I did enjoy the parts with Phury, and I am probably in the minority as far as Cormia goes. I actually liked her, which is funny because I couldn't stand Marissa. I also really loved the parts with Z and JM, and was happy that JM went through his transition. It really sucks that the good parts of the book were the ones that had nothing to do with the main characters.
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