

What other book might you compare The Midnight Hunt: Midnight Hunters, Book 1 to and why? This book is the beginning so I can see that the author is just trying to set the scenes and characters in place so yes the story itself may be lacking in parts but again, this is a series so I usually expect this out of a first book. Yes the sex scenes are graphic and hot (in my opinion) but in no way would I call this porn. I loved this book and I am looking forward to seeing where each of the characters take me. What did you love best about The Midnight Hunt: Midnight Hunters, Book 1?

It's too close to the idea of rape idolizing. the fact that complete negative stimulus overload can cause sexual satisfaction is horror worthy. that is not even masochism it's just wrong. there's a scene in the second book when one if them is getting tortured and she just can't stop organisming. pain, anger, any negative emotion just gets them hard and it's disturbing. And worst of all it's not exciting in the least when absolutely everything turns on the werewolves.

the wolves have no advantage or defence and therefore there's no point pretending and yet everyone does. It makes every confrontation with the sex - slave weres laughable. the whole vampire power set is rediculous. the whole obsession with sex is just off putting. a few things I disliked about this series in particular. I mean it's blatantly obvious that that's what the author wanted to write about and yet it's never directly addressed they go so far as to include males in the culture when basic evolutionary logic would suggest that if the females had evolved the ability to procreate indipendantly then the strictly male werewolves would have been slowly breed out of the species. And I really don't like how far they go to not call the werewolves hermaphrodites. and just as with other novels by Radclyffe there is very little difference in personality between the butches.

The line between Butches and Femmes is even more pronounced and is in fact given more distinct titles dominants. This series highlights every fault in Radclyffe novels.
