Seducing the Sorcerer
Seducing the Sorcerer
Ratings2
Average rating4.5
Reviews with the most likes.
I loved this book. It could've gone in a lot of different directions, but I like the focus that it has.
Before reading it, I appreciated that it was about men in their 40s, but I find age really is just a number in many romance novels. To me, though, this does actually feel like a book about older characters. I could identify with them easily.
I usually like the journey from despair to hope as a romance plot arc, but in some books, only one MC is on that path. Here, both characters have almost given up on life (understandably so); the events of the story, including their romance, teach them how to hope again and experience joy. I thought it was beautiful.
I loved how the MCs first connected over old (imaginary) popular culture and how surprising it was to Fenn that Morgrim had once needed to learn the same kinds of things that he did. I also liked how Fenn could so clearly see the boy Morgrim had once been. While some of the establishment of their connection was told and not shown, I thought that worked very well:
They talked. About horses and books and magic and the ways the world had changed since they'd been boys. Morgrim remembered a lot of the same things Fenn remembered. Fenn didn't have to explain how things used to be different: Morgrim knew. He'd lived it himself.
I teared up at one part of the ending, about the elderly horses. It had an obvious link to the book's main plot and it really affected me.