Tuesday 16 March 2021

Review: Veronica's Vice (Nesting Instinct Series Book 4) by Clairissa SinClair

Nesting Instinct: Book 4: Veronica's Vice Nesting Instinct: Book 4: Veronica's Vice by Clairissa SinClair
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Two For The Price of One

I’d probably give this book 3.5 ⭐️ if I could.

This is the fourth book in a series about vampires and their half-vampire mates, all based around a new American nest, with new ideas.

Roni has been brought on as a computer expert for the security company owned by the nest and she is a complete nerd in all her pink haired glory. She loves her new home where she is valued for her skills. She doesn’t want to be a traditional half-vampire and have a mate, babies and have to give up work. So when she walks back to her little cottage after a really long shift and catches sight of one of the twins who’ve moved in next door and feels that instant attraction that finding your destined mates has, she runs for her cottage and locks her door behind her in a blind panic.

German vampire twins, Luk and Nik are master farriers and sword-smiths. They have travelled all around the world gaining new skills. They finally decide to settle down in the new nest because it sounds like they are innovative and open to new ideas. They left their family smithing business because there were already too many people involved and they wanted to branch out on their own. When both vampires find their destined mate on the same day they are rather surprised to find it is the same woman, which is highly unusual, if not completely unheard of. They don’t realise that they are in for a long haul endeavour in gaining her trust.

This is an entertaining, if predictable book. I like the characters and it’s nice reading about the characters from the previous books. I don’t enjoy the really awful typos and poor editing. It’s really distracting when you have to look at a sentence for 30 seconds before you understand what the author is trying to say because they’ve missed out words completely or spelled them really badly. I don’t mind the odd typo here and there, it’s to be expected, however when they are so bad they disrupt my reading to this extent, it becomes a problem. It’s a shame because it makes it harder to be fair about star ratings for a book that otherwise is enjoyable.

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