The Irresistible Earl

Miss Frances Dean, known to friends and family as Fancy, had very firm ideas about a woman's rightful place in the world. As far as she was concerned, a woman should be educated, independent, and never, ever bow to the tyranny of a man.

The Earl of Wychfield was everything that Fancy mistrusted in a male. He was dazzlingly handsome, fabulously wealthy and superbly self-assured, with all that it took it win any woman he wanted. Fancy would only be happy that he could not possibly want her when the stunning Lady Celeste Standon made herself so very available to him. Because though Fancy told herself she was fully prepared to resist the advances of this man armed with so many weapons of attraction and snares of seduction, she trembled at what might happen should she be put to the test...


Original Publisher: Signet
Original Year of Publication: 1997
Page Count: 236

My last read was so awesome I wasn't sure what I wanted to follow it up with, so I eventually pulled a random number generator out on part of Mount TBR and chose this. While it started out fairly promising, it went downhill fast for me, and I couldn't wait to be finished with it.

That blurb is incredibly misleading. Fancy is of the "marriage is legal prostitution" radical feminist bent, and she doesn't hesitate to say so directly to the Earl the very first time she meets him - which, considering this is a marriage of convenience book (as well as battle of the sexes), means we're off to somewhat of a rocky start.

Unfortunately, Fancy lives up to her titular moniker, because she is incredibly foolish for the entire story. She is obstinate, sullen, and disdainful the entire time; when the earl proves himself to be competent and caring (he was a second son who made a military career before returning to take up the reins of the earldom), she only gets more and more angry with him. How dare he not meet her prejudiced expectations of what all aristocratic men are? The only way she knows to channel and/or express her feelings is to pick fights with pretty much everyone she knows, and this gets incredibly tedious incredibly quickly.

It's especially bad because Wychfield is so laid-back and easygoing. He rarely rises to her bait, which only makes her even madder, and honestly I had no idea what he saw in her. She is so immature, yet he feels she is the perfect person to take control of his unruly family of younger stepsiblings. This is probably because every other woman is his life is vain, selfish, and empty-headed, but still. I can't imagine *wanting* to spend your entire life bickering with your spouse, but I suppose it takes all kinds.

Lady Celeste is not much of a villain/other woman, considering she is Wychfield's sister-in-law, and had in fact dumped him for his brother in the first place. That doesn't stop Fancy from believing that he's really love with Celeste but doesn't want to admit it. Because this woman doesn't have enough to battle against, she has to make things up, too.

Ugh. This gets one star for Wychfield, who honestly deserves better, and half a star for the writing not being absolutely terrible, even if the heroine is. I'd be willing to give this author another try, but this one is going on the PBS pile.

⭐ 1/2

Samira is the lowliest creature of the Night World: a mere succubus, a winged spirit bringing dreams of passion to sleeping men. She knows every wicked wish that lurks in their hearts, and yet she has never felt the touch of a man’s loving hand. Nor has she wanted to . . . until now.

Shattered by war and banished to a crumbling fortress, Nicolae turns to the dark arts. He plans to use Samira as a tool to find a means to oust the invader from his lands and regain all that he’s lost. When she arrives on his doorstep in human form, his long-sought vengeance is lost. What happens next will change their worlds forever.


Original Publisher: Dorchester Love Spell
Original Year of Publication: 2004
Page Count: 326

The January 2025 #TBRChallenge is “New Year, Who Dis?” I went for a triple crown to start this year’s challenge: new series, new author, new subgenre – and this book does not disappoint!

The year is 1423. In the heart of Transylvania, 3 families are warring for supremacy: Dragosh of Maramures, Bogdan of Moldavia, and Vlad of Wallachia. Samira is a succubus (a female dream demon), known not only for her expertise in giving men pleasurable dreams, but also well-regarded for her ability to induce sexual nightmares. An incubus (male dream demon), Theron, has requested that Samira give an especially horrible dream to Dragosh. Samira doesn’t know why Theron has requested this, but she goes along with it, even though by dabbling in the dreams of princes, they are breaking all of the rules of the Night World which they inhabit. She doesn’t realize it at the time, but Samira gives Dragosh an especially cruel nightmare about his beautiful young sister, one that inadvertently changes the course of history.

Six years pass, during which Samira is wary of her status in the Night World. Succubi and incubi are children of Sleep, and grandchildren of Nyx, the Queen of Chaos. They are lowly demons, soulless beings with humanoid bodies and black leathery wings who serve mortals by giving them sexually pleasurable dreams to help slake repressed or rejected lust. Succubi and incubi have no feelings, no hearts, no real notions of morals; they reflect what their humans are thinking and dreaming about; they can see into the mind and pick out greatest wishes or worst nightmares, depending on what that person deserves to experience. Samira knows that she crossed the line with her dream to Dragosh, not only because of his royal status but because she sensed that he didn’t deserve what she gave him. If she’s caught by Nyx, she will be destroyed.

One night, she spies an especially strong strand of lust emanating from a small island in the middle of nowhere. She descends, curious, and finds a brutally scarred man asleep over a heap of books. She dives into his unconscious and tries to give him a pleasurable dream, but he seems to know that she’s there and that she’s a succubus, and thus he resists with all of his might. Samira is concerned; humans are not supposed to know that they are visited in their dreams by her kind. She notices a crude drawing of a succubus in one of the books and her concern trebles.

She leaves, but can’t quite leave it alone, mild curiosity about the man with such strong repression and dark thoughts. The next night, she is actually summoned by the man and trapped by a spell. The man tells her that he wants to use her to wreak revenge on his enemy: Dragosh of Maramures, who six years ago abruptly severed the betrothal between his sister and himself. The man who has captured Samira is Nicolae of Moldavia. He has been banished to a crumbling monastery on a remote island with a mere five men by his father, Bogdan. Nicolae is desperate not only for revenge, but also to return to his father’s good graces and assist with the war against Maramures and Wallachia. Apparently Dragosh has formed a new alliance with Vlad – now called Vlad Draco, or Vlad the Dragon – and has promised his sister, Lucia, to Vlad as part of the deal.

Samira listens with growing horror as Nicolae tells her all this. She’s the one who induced the nightmare that made Dragosh break the betrothal between Nicolae and Lucia. She holds herself responsible for everything that has happened to Nicolae in the meantime, and becomes desperate to find a way to assist him. He’s holding onto her too long, however; daylight will immediately destroy her, and Nicolae doesn’t believe her until its almost too late.

Samira disappears from the mortal realm, only to find herself still intact in the palace of Nyx, Queen of the Night World. Nyx demands to know who requested that Samira meddle in the dreams of Dragosh, a prince, but Samira refuses to name Theron. She’s ready to accept her fate of immediate death, but pleads with Nyx to give her the chance to assist Niholae and make right what she inadvertently made wrong to begin with. Nyx eventually agrees, and drops Samira back onto Nicolae’s island as a full-blown mortal woman, warning her that she only has 30 days to successfully assist Nicolae and to learn why mortals are so precious to the demons of the Night World who serve them.

It's a lot of setup for the story, but it’s weaved together quite seamlessly. Nicolae has turned away from violence, at which he failed (and for which he has been so brutally disfigured), and towards dark magic in his quest against Dragosh. He grudgingly accepts Samira’s help once she appears to him as a mortal human woman. After all, what could it hurt?

Samira spends her time discovering (and complaining about) her human body, and trying to find a way to help Nicolae, to whom she increasingly becomes attached. She even tells him of the part she played at the start, which leads Nicolae to confess to her why and how he was disfigured. Their bond grows stronger as the story progresses, and she assists Nicolae in discovering his latent abilities as a wizard. Theron shows up again to cause trouble, but ultimately gives them a piece of information which is key in turning the tides of war against their enemies. Samira then has to face Nyx and her destiny – will she be allowed to live, or be destroyed by the all-knowing Queen of Chaos?

I really enjoyed this story, especially when Samira is turned into a human. She has no idea what it’s like to be human – her only knowledge is sexual, and the thoughts and fantasies that humans only dream about. She doesn’t know how to read, or eat, or even dress herself. She’s an interesting contrast to the human characters, and to Nicolae, who is mired in deep depression for the mess he’s made of his life. Samira’s child-like joy at the smallest things, like a sunrise, remind Nicolae that there’s more to life than darkness and heartache. They do fall in love with each other, even though neither can quite believe it (and Nicolae’s men frequently remind Samira that she is a demon); the third act breakup is an interesting twist on the usual misunderstanding.

This is also a very spicy book. Succubi and incubi are dream demons who work in the realm of sex, so there are a lot of explicit scenes, some of them pretty grim (see: Dragosh’s nightmare). But there is also some great emotion, especially when Nicolae acknowledges and grieves his own past, and when he realizes that he doesn’t want anyone to touch Samira except himself.

As for the historical background, it appears to line up fairly well with the actual history of the Transylvania region of present-day Romania. Vlad Draco referred to in the text is likely not the one we immediately think of, but his father, Vlad II Dracul. The human superstitions around religion and demonology also play a role here, especially in the climax of this story.

I enjoyed this immensely. It has both serious and lighthearted moments, spice, sex, and death, all wrapped up into an engrossing fantasy world. I’m looking forward to reading the second book in this duology, which stars Theron, who is a complete asshole in this one. He has his own ambitions and is ready to defy Queen Nyx, and has also made a dastardly deal with Vlad Draco. I am curious to see how he will be redeemed!

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
The list has been released for the 2025 #TBRChallenge!


I definitely need some help with those prompts, and the lovely SuperWendy has translated them on her master post:

January 15 - New Year, Who Dis? (suggestions: a debut, a new-to-you author, character looking for fresh start)
February 19 - Previously, In Romance... (suggestions: part of a series, author you haven't read in a while, Old School)
March 19 - Rizz (If you're old like me, this is slang the kids are using for "charisma" - I'm thinking playboys, rakes, heroes that have charm for days....)
April 16 - Location, Location, Location (interesting settings, unusual historicals etc.)
May 21 - Older Couple (self-explanatory)
June 18 - Road Trip (suggestions: couple traveling together, character who recently moved/relocated)
July 16 - Back in My Day... (suggestions: historical, Old School, I might go with a book that was published when I was in high school or college 😭)
August 20 - Do the Hustle (suggestions: single moms trying to make ends meet, work-related struggles, shady characters with ulterior motives / agenda).
September 17 - Friend Squad (self-explanatory)
October 15 - Here There Be Monsters (suggestions: monsters, Gothic, paranormal, fantasy, romantic suspense - humans being the biggest monsters of all quite frankly....)
November 19 - Change of Plans (suggestions: the character who has a wrench thrown in the works - sudden custody of kid(s), time travel, death in the family, accident, dystopia, left at the altar etc.)
December 17 - Celebration! (suggestions: weddings, parties, masquerade balls, holiday stories)

I do not anticipate having the hiatus that I did this year, as moving tends to be a once-every-15-years deal for me, so hopefully Mount TBR will shorten, inch by inch. If you want to join us, be sure to check out the post linked above!

Chills and Fever

Lovely Lady Chloe Maitland was caught on the horns of a dilemma. As a proper young country miss in the London Marriage Mart, she was duty-bound to agree to obey her dragon of a grandmama and give her hand to the age Lord Twisdale, who had buried one young wife and now lusted to take an even younger one. But if Twisdale sent shivers down Chloe's spine, Julian St Aubyn made her strike as from a flame. St Aubyn was the most wicked rake in the realm, and Chloe's innocence would be no match for his infamous expertise. Should Chloe sacrifice her happiness on the altar of duty - or her virtue in the arms of a man who mocked all decency? She heard the response of her heart - and knew how wrong it could be...


Original Publisher: Signet
Original Year of Publication: 1994
Page Count: 222

The November 2024 #TBRChallenge is "It Came from the 1990s!" Believe it or not, I have a dearth of 90s books on Mount TBR. The vast majority or either older or were published in the 2000s. I went looking through my Signets, hoping against hope that there was at least one not published in 198-, and lucked upon this one.

Lady Chloe Maitland has been left to her grandmother’s care during the Season, as her own mother has just married (for the second time) and is off to the Continent for her honeymoon. Unfortunately, Chloe’s grandmother is a well-known dragon of a dowager, and she has her heart set on betrothing her granddaughter to Lord Twisdale. Twisdale is more of age with the grandmother than young Chloe, and she not only finds him repulsive as a human being, she is also deathly allergic to whatever scent he wears – anytime he comes near, she sneezes quite violently.

She is at the Purcell ball when she first notices Lord St Aubyn (Julian to his friends), a notorious rake and scoundrel. He happens to be talking to Chloe’s aunt, Elinor Hadlow, herself a young widow on the prowl for a rich second husband. She’s set her sites on St Aubyn, and has gone so far as to buy the townhouse opposite the street from his in an exclusive neighborhood.

St Aubyn has no desire to wed the delectable Elinor. He is getting pressure from his father to marry someone respectable and set up his nursery, but like many rakes before and after him, he just Doesn’t Want To. Still sowing his wild oats, to a degree. He’s intrigued by the widow Hadlow, but not enough to make her his mistress, much less his wife.

Lady Chloe escapes from the ballroom after a particularly odious encounter with her elders, and runs smack into St Aubyn. She’s flustered to be face to face with such a notorious man, but because she knows she hasn’t chance of impressing him, talks rather frankly to him. They exchange dilemmas and realize that they might just be able to help each other out. Grandmama has clothed Lily basically in dowdy half-mourning, but St Aubyn is willing to feign some interest in her to stir up the interest of other, more eligible, bachelors, in hopes of thwarting Twisdale’s suit. Spending time with her will also deter Elinor, or so St Aubyn hopes.

They don’t quite realize what they’ve gotten themselves into, and just what formidable forces they are up against. Grandmama is unyielding; Twisdale and Elinor begin plotting together to separate their quarry and trap them if necessary.

Chloe releases some of her pent-up frustration in the form of wicked caricatures of the ton’s elite, drawing certain people as the animals that best suit them. Grandmama is a dragon; Twisdale is a serpent; St Aubyn, a lion rampart. Elinor steals Chloe’s drawings and has them displayed at a ton party, much to Chloe’s humiliation, but St Aubyn swoops in and lavishes his approval on them. He also happens to be friends with Beau Brommel, and gets the Beau on his side of matters. Chloe becomes a minor sensation for her drawings, much to Elinor’s irritation.

Chloe has basically one friend in Town, Laura Spayne, who is quite eager to help her avoid the noose Twisdale is dangling. St Aubyn and Theo Purcell (son of the original party hostess) also team up to assist the girls, and it seems to be working – until one fateful evening, when a trap goes utterly wrong: instead of compromising her hated niece with Twisdale, Elinor storms into the library to find Chloe and St Aubyn together in a passionate embrace! St Aubyn immediately asks Grandmama for Chloe’s hand.

So far, so good: a fairly traditional Regency romance setup, and our hero and heroine are ‘compromised’ into a convenient marriage. They independently decide that they love each other, too. Chloe, however, harkens back to her very first conversation with him and is convinced that St Aubyn doesn’t want to marry anyone, let alone her, and suddenly the clever girl lauded for her caricatures becomes the living embodiment of TSTL. She is so bound and determined to find a way to “free” Julian from this unwanted obligation, apparently so obtuse that she is unaware that he is not exactly fighting this twist of fate.

She comes up with a hairbrained idea of how they can go through with their marriage and yet have it annulled later; Julian humors her for about a split second before reminding her that an annulment will socially ruin her, a consequence that of course she gave no thought to. She’s so headstrong and heartstricken, however, that she continues to search for a way to break their marital bond.

Meanwhile, now that Chloe is off the market, Twisdale has turns his sights to Laura. He’s desperate for a spirited young wife because he relishes the idea of breaking her like a wild animal. His first wife died under mysterious circumstances, and Chloe decides that if she can just prove that Twisdale murdered wife #1, he will be ostracized from Society and Laura will be safe from him.

So Chloe and St Aubyn spend their honeymoon at St Aubyn’s country estate, located conveniently next door to Twisdale’s estate, and decide to go detecting. The resolution of this last-minute third act mystery is laughably simple and easily solved, especially once revealed that Julian is Lord Lieutenant of the shire and thus, can bring private justice against Twisdale if necessary.

Chloe runs away in the final chapter and of course St Aubyn chases her, and they have a Huge Romance Moment at the end where they finally consummate their relationship. Because TSTL wins out in the end, I suppose.

I really enjoyed the first third to half of this book. The writing is smooth and adroit, the characters are fun, the antagonists scheming each in their own way. I started having reservations shortly before the big Compromising Scene at the ball, and Chloe’s 180 degree shift in personality just threw me completely. Shove in an unnecessary mystery and a really stupid ending, and this book just sorta came to a whimpering end, to me. Still, I enjoyed this author enough that I will read more of her work, which is a good thing, considering I already have several books (including the second in this duet) on Mount TBR.


⭐⭐1/2

A time of sorcery, romance...and the magic that is love

All Hallow's Eve...a night when the impossible happens...when Regency castles are filled with mystery and intrigue...when costume balls in elegant mansions may lead to passionate surprises...and when ladies and gentlemen of the ton find themselves falling under a spell that may be other-worldly. Or as close as their own hearts...in these three delightfully mysterious tales...

Teresa DesJardien's The Haunted Bride is the second Lady Healey who has just wed a nobleman whose first marriage ended in tragedy...and whose seductive embrace could bring danger - or the love of a lifetime. In Cindy Holbrook's Love's Magic, a young sorceress meets her destiny in a handsome highborn Duke who is promised to another...a union only the powers of true love can prevent. Valerie King's The Vampire Rogue pairs a charming rake with an heiress, whose newly acquired castle is the setting for a masquerade ball...and where the resident vampire has his own plans for eternally joining these unlikely lovers.

Let this trio of romances be your Halloween treat - wonderful stories set in elegant Regency England, where lords and ladies are truly bewitched by love!


Original Publisher: Zebra
Original Year of Publication: 1996
Page Count: 380


The Haunted Bride - Teresa DesJardien (148 pages)
On the occasion of her cousin's wedding, Etta Carson quite literally meets the man of her dreams. He introduces himself as Lord Healey, and demands to know why she possesses a dozen sketches of him, when they've never before met and he's never been to London. She rather reluctantly admits its because this is a man she has seen regularly in her dreams. His response is equally curious: does she believe in things beyond the reach of the physical senses?

Etta is reluctant to admit it to him, but yes, it's true. Sketching the images she sees in her dreams helps her make sense of them. She has dreamed of certain events which later actually occurred, and she is both uneasy about and confident in this ability to make sense of her dreams by sketching them out. She had no idea who this man was, but now that she sees him in the flesh, she realizes that it is, indeed, him.

Lord Healey (Daniel), is a friend of the husband of her cousin, who has arrived for the wedding and intends to return to his home in Bath the same day. But after meeting Etta, he decides to stick around, and for the rest of the week his earnestly courts her. He proposes seven days after they originally meet, and Etta accepts. Within the month, they are married, and they return to his property in Bath.

Etta immediately has an uneasy feeling about the house. Negativity seems to abound, and only 4 servants remain. The rest of them have been scared off by ghostly encounters. Daniel admits to Etta that he didn't tell her all of his background, wanting her to have a 'fresh' eye on the house and her own impression of it first. But with Daniel's sullen brother Sean lurking about, he has to tell her everything. Daniel's first wife, Aileen, died in the house after a horrific asthma attack, locked in her dressing room with no one knowing that she was suffering. Daniel himself was downstairs, asleep in his study, and was the first one to find her. Ever since her death, the servants reported seeing Aileen's ghost quite frequently, and some of them were so scared that they left, even without receiving their full wages.

Sean was injured during his time in the military and now basically lurks about Daniel's house, drinking himself to death. He seems to take keen and cruel interest in telling Etta the wild stories about Aileen's last days, and how Daniel reacted in the wake of her death. It becomes obvious that Sean was in love with Aileen, too; with it not being entirely clear that Aileen's death was indeed a natural one, Etta begins to wonder if she was murdered - and if so, by whom.

This story has a nice little gothic/Rebecca-esque feel (and, indeed, the housekeeper is a crazy woman, though her motives are more twisted that Mrs Danvers'). I enjoyed the flow and pace of this, and found it the most believable of the bunch, even with Etta's perhaps supernatural intuitions. She is a character who is strong and sure of herself, and even though the stories of her new home upset her, she isn't running around like a chicken with its head cut off, spooking at every shadow. At 148 pages, it is the longest novella of the collection and definitely has the most complete character and story arc.

⭐⭐⭐⭐

Love's Magic - Cindy Holbrook (125 pages)
The first chapter sets the plot up quite nicely. In the village of Chancellorville, there exist both good and evil witches. The good witches are Bathsheba and Dorinda Goodfellow, a pair of elderly spinster sisters who are bumbling but well-meaning. They care for their (non-sorceress) niece, Sarabeth, whom they love to post is the most beautiful girl in the village. The evil witch is Dame Maudar Tureen, a woman obsessed with black magic and power, and the continual gain of both, at whatever cost. She is quite proud of her beautiful, raven-haired daughter, Gertrude, who is indeed beautiful but is also a complete moron.

The long-absent Duke of Tor, Damian, is returning to Chancellorville because his castle has been partially burned, and there is a suspicion of arson. Damian's family has long had the ability of wizardry, and Dame Tureen is determined to marry her daughter to Damian and gain control of his powers. When the Goodfellow sisters proudly boast that if anyone can catch the Duke's eye, it will be their niece Sarabeth, Maudar is furious. She will not let anything stand in the way of her kingmaking, and casts a spell to turn Sarabeth invisible, right before Damian's eyes.

Damian and Sarabeth meet briefly, so briefly that he thinks its a dream. He's wary of returning to the superstitious village, and has no belief in the stories about the men of his family being powerful wizards. He basically wants to restore his castle and get the hell out of town. He's relieved to meet Dame Tureen and Gertrude, as they claim to be among the few who also don't believe in the superstitious nonsense of the villagers. Plus, Gertrude is beautiful.

Sarabeth returns to her aunts, who try their hardest to make her visible again, but have several hilarious results instead: turning her into their cat, then a parrot, and finally a mouse. The Goodfellow family learns that Maudar has cast a spell on Damian to make him marry Gertrude because she believes that the consummation of their marriage will bring him into his latent abilities and that she can take control of him. So now its a race against time to return Sarabeth to her original form and stop Damian from making a terrible mistake that he'll never be able to undo.

This reads like a straight-up fairytale, a mixture of the Disney versions of Sleeping Beauty (the aunts are the good fairies) and Cinderella. It is also very...juvenile? Like, I'd expect to find this in a YA collection. It is very straightforward, with magic dictating the plot. There is no depth of emotion in any of the characters, beyond some wallowing in Maudar's evil villainess status. The happily ever after is literally the end of the story - I can't imagine any of these characters actually having sex, LOL.

⭐⭐

The Vampire Rogue - Valerie King (87 pages)
Emma Keverne, the newest heiress of Castle Breage, has decided to throw a huge Halloween masquerade at the spooky Cornwall estate. She invites many people, including Lord Chace, whom she has been in love with for the last 3 years. They met at Emma's coming out party and have been dancing around each other ever since. They start to do more than dance at this ball, however, and both notice a rather sinister figure hanging around, whom no one really knows. Only - Emma recognizes him. She drags Chace down to the picture gallery and points out a long ago ancestor, Count Lansallos. Chace agrees that he does indeed look like this unknown man, albeit in clothes a few centuries out of date. Emma tells him that while she was reading the papers associated with the castle, she came across some very disturbing stories and warnings, including the disappearance of her cousins the St Austells. One day they were there, the next they were missing, and no one had seen hide nor hair of them since. Edward St Austell left a warning to never fill in the moat around the castle, but without an explicit explanation as to why, Emma ignores the directive and fills it in for the party. Now Count Lansallos has shown up again, and Emma fears that he means to turn her into an immortal vampire.

She believes this because she has seen the youngest St Austell in the castle's secret passages, and introduces Chace to him when he pops out again. He's the one who tells them that Lansallos is a vampire, that he turned the St Austells into vampires nearly a century ago, and that filling the moat was his invitation back. He has his sights set on the beautiful Emma, and the only way they can protect themselves is with silver crosses and daylight. Emma and Chace spend the next few evenings battling with Lansallos and trying to help the St Austells, who were also drawn back because of the filled moat and who want to assist in defeating the man who ruined their lives all that time ago.

You basically have to roll with this premise, because things happen so fast you don't really have time to question them. There is so much historical handwaving going on that I'm a bit wary of trying this author's full-length work (I have several of her novels in my collection). The action is fast-paced and interesting enough to see through to the end, and there is a surprisingly gruesome climax (basically, vampire meets sunlight is a really awful way to go, like burning alive). Backstory for Emma and Chace is sprinkled in, but it doesn't really feel like much except setup for their own silly misunderstandings. There is an aunt to provide comic relief, but Emma and Chace drug her so she sleeps through most of the fighting. This story really needed some more page length to really flesh everything out, characters and plot alike.

⭐⭐ 1/2