

Vin was a character I immediately fell in love with and I’m not even sure why.

He is tough, and human, with his own set of morals and ideas on how he has to operate. Jim is a character with a more than mysterious past, who goes through some fairly large character evolution within this novel. She was right, these books are my kind of thing. I did not regret my choice to listen to my friend. So I embarked on my J.R Ward journey, opting for the shorter of two (three?) series that she had offered to lend to me, a little overwhelmed by the length of Black Dagger at this stage in the game. (Plus who turns down a free book when it’s lent to you? I sure don’t) However a good friend of mine suggested this book, and because I trust my friends I had no choice but to give it a go. Usually it’s half-dressed women on the cover, so at least there’s that. Now granted, this one isn’t too bad in terms of urban fantasy or sci-if.


Therefore I wasn’t too interested in J.R Ward, much in the same way that I was not interested in a lot of my favourite authors due to the cover art. I tend to have the bad habit of judging a book by its cover. So here is one of the things that I am terribly ashamed to admit about myself. And then he meets a woman who will make him question his destiny, his sanity, and his heart-and he has to work with a fallen angel to win her over and redeem his own soul. Vin DiPietro long ago sold his soul to his business, and he’s good with that-until fate intervenes in the form of a tough-talking, Harley-riding, self-professed savior. But everything changes when he becomes a fallen angel and is charged with saving the souls of seven people from the seven deadly sins. Redemption isn’t a word Jim Heron knows much about-his specialty is revenge, and to him, sin is all relative. This is the first battle between a savior who doesn’t believe and a demon with nothing to lose!
