

There's nothing Keira Bazin dislikes more than defense lawyers. Or does she? An empath criminal prosecutor. Too bad the one woman he has his sights on wants nothing to do with him. until Hera leaves him, forcing him to uphold Gaea's clause: There must always be a Queen, or he loses his title and part of his power along with it. Zeus/Zane, King of the Greek gods, holds the world in his palm in both his mortal and godly form. Post navigation ← Book Review: Tides of the Sovereign, by Kate Gateley Book Review: Consort to a Dark Fey, by S.K.A god-king disguised as a criminal defense lawyer. This entry was posted in books/book review and tagged blog tour, book tour, carly spade, fantasy, fantasy romance, Greek mythology, paranormal, Paranormal romance, PNR, romance, World Tree Publishing on by Sadie.

But, hey, if you like the show Lucifer, I bet you’d like this a lot. I just think maybe I wasn’t quite the right reader for the book. And, IDK, I guess it just departed too far from the known Zeus of mythology. She stepped into her role as goddess and queen (over significantly older, more experienced gods/goddesses) with no notable insecurity of learning curve, etc. She suddenly knew how to use her powers with no adjustments. And then I disliked the end (just about everything after the wedding) because it was just too pat. I liked the middle well enough, as he dropped some of that act. I didn’t particularly enjoy the beginning, because Zeus was just so smarmy. There wasn’t really anything wrong with it. Can she fight her growing attraction for him? Does she want to? His emotions are the strongest she’s ever felt–borderline overwhelming. Tensions flare as the two immediately butt heads, but there’s something about Zane she can’t put her finger on. So when she discovers Zane Vronti, one of New York’s finest, has been brought in on her newest murder case, it’s anything but good news. There’s nothing Keira Bazin dislikes more than defense lawyers. Zeus/Zane, King of the Greek gods, holds the world in his palm in both his mortal and godly form… until Hera leaves him, forcing him to uphold Gaea’s clause: There must always be a Queen, or he loses his title and part of his power along with it. I accepted a review copy of Zeus, by Carly Spade, through Literary Bound Tours.Ī god-king disguised as a criminal defense lawyer…
