Dark Lover (Black Dagger Brotherhood, Book 1) Kindle Books Reviews
Dark Lover (Black Dagger Brotherhood, Book 1)
Description: In the shadows of the night in Caldwell, New York, there’s a deadly turf war between vampires & their murderers. There exists a secret band of brothers like no other six vampire warriors defending their race. But none of them more than Wrath relishes killing the leader of the Black Dagger Brotherhood. has left The only purebred vampire
Rating:
List Price: $ 7.99
Price:
Link
Incoming search terms:
- black dagger brotherhood, dark lover pdf free downloads, black dagger brotherhood 10 free pdf, black dagger brotherhood book 10, Dark Lover (Black Dagger Brotherhood #1) by J R Ward, dark lover kindle, download brain rules for baby mobii, free Dark Lover for kindle
Related posts:
- Lover Avenged: A Novel of the Black Dagger Brotherhood Kindle Books Reviews
- Bearers of the Black Staff: Legends of Shannara Kindle Books Reviews
- Mennonite in a Little Black Dress: A Memoir of Going Home Kindle Books Reviews
- Black Hills Kindle Books Reviews
- Dead and Gone (Sookie Stackhouse, Book 9) Kindle Books Reviews
- Kandle LED Book Light in Black with new WideLip grip designed for the Amazon Kindle, Sony Reader and other eBook readers
- Amazon Kindle 2 Black Faux Leather e-Book Reader Carrying Case Cover
- Built Neoprene Kindle Sleeve (Fits 6″ Display, Latest Generation Kindle), Black Reviews
Tags: Black, Book, Books, Brotherhood, Dagger, Dark, Kindle, Lover, Reviews

August 27th, 2010 at 7:16 pm
Review by Kristi Ahlers for Dark Lover (Black Dagger Brotherhood, Book 1)
Rating:
Wrath is a vampire who prefers to be alone, and work alone. When his good friend Darius asks for Wrath’s help with his daughter he is turned down by Wrath. Knowing going into the request it would probably be a negative answer he still attempts to reach Wrath’s softer side. Darius’s daughter is half human and she is getting ready to change over but will need the help of a strong vampire male. Wrath thinks he has been able to walk away from that commitment and responsibility but then Darius is killed. Now he must look over his friend’s daughter. Too bad the human, Beth speaks to the long buried part of him he thought dead. Will he be able to walk away from her after her transition?
Beth has been noticing changes in her body but has been largely ignoring them as she goes about her business as writer for a local newspaper. But one night she thinks she dreams about a dark, large man who has fangs and it scares her. When she realizes it was not a dream but reality she at first wants to freak out…but then she also can’t get over how sexy he is. When she finds out the truth about herself and Wrath will Beth be willing to accept what fate has in store or will the Lessers get to her first?
Ms. Ward’s new vampire world is a delicious addition to the sub-genre of vampire fiction. Her story is a little dark, and little erotic, and a whole lot entertaining. She has taken the vampire legend and has made it her own. With an eclectic group of secondary characters, her own creatively drawn bad guys the reader will not roll their eyes with boredom. I highly look forward to the next in the series.
August 27th, 2010 at 7:25 pm
Review by Cat Lover for Dark Lover (Black Dagger Brotherhood, Book 1)
Rating:
What an excellent writer this is! Dark Lover will easily make the best seller lists and win awards. I love paranormal romances (as well as all other kinds of romances – having read hundreds of them) and this is top quality. At first, I was dismayed by the level of violence and cussing in this book, it being even grittier than Kenyon’s and Feehan’s works. Still, I think Sherrilyn Kenyon fans will love this. The romance was superb – not overboard on the sex but plenty of detailed sensuality – just perfect! We get to meet several lovable(ha!) characters which will make up future books in this series and I will read them all, even if I am flinching a bit at all the blood, gore and language. The romantic line is worth it.
August 27th, 2010 at 7:57 pm
Review by Kalea for Dark Lover (Black Dagger Brotherhood, Book 1)
Rating:
I have without a doubt The Black Dagger Brotherhood will have a cult following. It’s dark, dramatic, and the characters are likable. They all have their own little kinks. The story is decent.
Dark Lover starts off with Darius, an aristocrat vamp, asking Wrath, the blind king, to help his half-breed daughter, Beth through the transition. The transition is similar to puberty. Darius fears his daughter may not survive it and thinks Wrath’s pure vampire blood would be strong enough to help her. Wrath declines because he’s a loner, prefers to keep to himself, and is an arrogant jerk. Unfortunately, Darius is killed by lessers (soul-less vamp killing humans) and his last wish was for Wrath to find Beth.
I expected Wrath and Beth’s first encounter to be interesting. Intsead it was the typical, borderline cheesy, instant sexual attraction scene. Beth wanted Wrath to do her on the spot. “Kiss me. Touch me. moan moan moan” After Wrath realizes how much he loves Beth he becomes very needy. He needs her every second of everyday. He wasn’t acting like a male, much less an alpha male warrior.
The brothers are all supposed to be over 100 years old and they have accents which they hide when they speak, yet they sound like OUTDATED thugs. “Straight up. True? My brother. Man. Yo” I smiled every time I read a dialogue between them. I was half expecting them to pronounce all the words that end with an “-er” with an “-a” sound. Like “My Brotha” LOL Another thing I found funny was how manly the brothers liked to act, and when they’re spilling their guts out, the tend to clam up quickly, fearing their masculinity would be compromised. Also, pay attention to their names. Rhage (Rage), Phury (Fury), Vishous (Vicious), Zsadist (Sadist), Tohrment (Torment).
The plot felt like it was thrown together haphazardly. There were no real plans in the fight against the lessers. I think this series has a lot of promise and will possibly be better in the future. Whenever a writer starts something new, they tend to experiment and get a better feel for the story. It’s too bad none of the books are stand alone; every book is connected. I hope when Phury’s story is written, things won’t be as choppy.
Some of the elements in this book is similar to Christine Feehan’s Dark Carpathian series, which I highly recommend.
August 27th, 2010 at 8:07 pm
Review by LTR for Dark Lover (Black Dagger Brotherhood, Book 1)
Rating:
Ugh. I hated this book. With all of the rave reviews given to this book I was extremely shocked to find how much I hated it. Finding one stitch of intelligent dialogue in this book is like finding a needle in a hay stack. Sadly, my original review of this book has been deleted so here I go again.
Here are the characters:
Beth, the heroine. She’s half vampire and half human but knows nothing of her vampire heritage. Her food consumption consisted of Twinkies, fish crackers, cookies, chinese food and cola. Good god I felt unhealthy after reading this book. I was just waiting for her to rip out her pack of cigarettes and start chain smoking. Beth’s dialogue is simply terrible. When the author delves into her thoughts it is even worse.
Wrath, the hero, and I use this term loosely. He wants to protect Beth while she is going through her transition. He normally doesn’t have anything to do with humans but Beth smells good so he makes an exception. He will basically kill anything that gets in his way although the author claims he’s quite honorable. He’s blind, leather-wearing, (pants too) emotionally weak and the leader of the vampire mobsters. His homeys consist of Tohrment, Rhage, Zsadist and Phury. They are also leather-wearing, sword-weilding vampires who sit around listening to rap. One of them likes to rape and kill. Cool.
We have some really wonderful baby powder scented villains (no I’m not joking) who are trying to kill all the honorable vampires. Mr. X as he’s called is the most one dimensional villain that I’ve ever read. His scenes are really quite disgusting. There must only be 26 of these soulless, zombie villains because we would run out of letters pretty quickly otherwise and would have to think up real names.
Butch is a stereotypical, macho cop who’s in love with Beth. He actually hiked up his pants when he was going in for an arrest. Yep.
There are a few other cardboard characters within the book but they are really not worth mentioning.
Within the book you can read such wonderfully original prose:
“His throat was raw, and it felt like he’d french-kissed a blowtorch.”
“He looked like he was smuggling paint rollers under his skin.” (refers to six pack abs)
These are probably the worst similes I have ever read. There are many more in the book though if you like that kind of thing.
I know I didn’t really get into the plot but I think you get what I’m trying to say. This was a bad, bad book. Unfortunately I bought a few of the other books in the series at the same time. I’ve learned my lesson.
August 27th, 2010 at 8:53 pm
Review by Nichole Beaulieu for Dark Lover (Black Dagger Brotherhood, Book 1)
Rating:
Based upon the panoply of 4 and 5 star reviews, I was pretty excited to pick this first “Brotherhood” book up. However, after the 532 years it took to finish, I must add to the voices of dissention and say I just didn’t like this book … at all. In fact, “Dark Lover” sometimes got me downright angry to be wasting so much time grinding through it. I kept hoping it would start to flow and improve, I kept giving it “another 40 pages…” but it never recovered. The fear of someone else being misguided into believing this is a romantic masterpiece got my hackles up. Therapy is writing this review.
I know, I know – there are some reviews here of people who enjoyed this work, so take my opinion for what it is. Still, that doesn’t make J.R. Ward even close to the next Julie Garwood, Virginia Henley or Anne Rice.
This isn’t a romance book in spite of what the publishing blurb says. It a banal mishmash featuring a formulaic psycho killer and his coven, the typical macho cop, the leather-wearing – uh … dangerous (?) vampire, and an unimpressive heroine… in that order. No really, in that order. The albino psycho gets more page time than anyone else. Be prepared to enjoy the albino psycho constructing his evil plot, the albino psycho musing about his history, the albino psycho growing from his mistakes, and the albino psycho admiring himself in a new set of tennis shorts. Huh? Where’s the interaction between hero and heroine? Ohhh right, that’s the 3 or 4 pages every 70 pages or so. As the reader, I was desperately trying to fill in the feelings of the characters for the author, trying to flesh out the story, trying very much to avoid comparing it to a C-grade thriller.
(*more sarcasm*) I particularly cherished when our hero vampire admired his lover’s flawless physical beauty … even though he was nearly 100% blind. That’s right, he _sniffed_ how fine-looking she was. Love is grand.(*end sarcasm*)
Admittedly I don’t read romances for their literary or innovative value. I _do_ read them for the quixotic escapism, and this didn’t have any. It irked me that I had to suffer through a cast of thousands, cliché after cliché, purple prose, and bizarre ineffectual similes such as ‘his chest was like ‘paint rollers under the skin?’ Eewwwww! (I think another review mentioned this too… oh, just so horrifying.)
I know these type of books have an amount of predictability to them – romances are read knowing there’s a happy ending – so after suffering through 400-ish pages, I guess I wasn’t surprised how it closed: yes, the biggest baddest gang of loner vampires end up getting a condo together in the Hamptons. Ok no, not really… but just as dreadful.
This book valiantly tried to be so much, and ended up so little.
Please, save yourself the money. Or if you feel you really would like to read this, get it used… and please don’t hurt the messenger.