Friday, September 20, 2019

Book Review: Prisoner of the Night (Black Dagger Brotherhood World) by J.R. Ward

Prisoner of the Night (Black Dagger Brotherhood World)
by J.R. Ward 
January 7, 2019
Publisher: Gallery Books
Pages:
When Ahmare’s brother is abducted, there is nothing she won’t do to get him back safely. She is unprepared, however, for the lengths she will have to go to save his life. Paired with a dangerous but enticing prisoner, she embarks on an odyssey into another world.

Duran, betrayed by his father, imprisoned in a dungeon for decades, has survived only because of his thirst for vengeance. He has been biding his time to escape and is shocked to find an unlikely and temporary freedom in the form of a determined young female.

Battling against deadly forces and facing unforeseen peril, the pair are in a race to save Ahmare’s brother. As time runs out, and the unthinkable looms, even true love may not be enough to carry them through.


Almare has already lost her parents to the raids and when her brother is taken by a maniac, she will stop at nothing to get him back. Chalen isn’t one to keep his word so he renegotiates with Almare when she wants her brother returned to her. He promises her his return if she takes the weapon he provides and fetches his beloved and returns them to him. Almare is shocked when she finds out what the weapon is but won’t let that stop her from saving her brother.

In the Black Dagger Brotherhood world, it’s always nice to meet new characters and discover new adventures outside of the compound. Duran has lived a terrible life filled with betrayal, hatred, and abuse, but when he meets Almare the chemistry between the two of them is instant.

Getting 5 sheep





Denise B


About the Author:
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J.R. Ward is the number one New York Times bestselling author of the Black Dagger Brotherhood series of vampire books. She is a winner of the prestigious Romance Writers of America RITA award for Best Paranormal Romance and is a multiple RITA nominee. A graduate of Smith College, she was a double major in History and Art History with a medieval concentration in both and she still longs at times for a return to those days sitting in dark lecture halls, looking at slides of old triptychs and reliquaries. Prior to becoming a full time writer, she was a corporate attorney, serving for many years as the Chief of Staff of one of Harvard Medical Schools premier teaching sites. Her idea of absolute heaven is a day filled with nothing but her computer, her dog and her coffee pot and the Brothers, of course.

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