Soulless
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3.8 • 56 Ratings
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Publisher Description
He feels nothing. He needs no one. Until her.
Raze is a weapon forged in silence and sharpened by pain. As a Detyen without a mate, he should be dead. Instead, he's sacrificed his soul to survive, killing his emotions and leaving them buried beneath ice and ruthless control.
He doesn't smile. He can't feel.
And he definitely doesn't fall for reckless, mouthy human operatives… no matter how tempting they are.
Then Sierra crashes into his grim, frozen world like a solar flare: hot, wild, and untouchably alive. Stranded on a dying planet, she's running out of options, and the only thing standing between her and death is a lethal alien male who looks like sin and fights like shadow-born death.
She shouldn't trust him.
He can't crave her.
But the heat between them is explosive… and impossible. Detyens without souls don't form mate bonds. But someone forgot to tell fate.
The more time Raze spends near Sierra, the more cracks form in his icy control. The more he touches her, the closer he comes to something fatal: feeling.
And if his emotions return before they figure out their bond, he won't just be broken… he'll be dead.
She could save him.
Or she could be his perfect, devastating ruin.
Customer Reviews
Half-Baked, needs less or more
There were some really weird and awkward grammatical and word choices and the plot was a little funky. It almost seemed like the author was making it up as she went and then only did the bare minimum when editing to make it make sense.
It was also a little convoluted and then came to an inconclusive ending, but the ending might be that way because there’s an ongoing series to consider.
Overall it was an interesting concept but it was in need of more editing, to either shave it down a few plot points and characters. Or develop them further to make more sense. It was a middle of the road half-baked story that could have been really good and probably is if you don’t like to nit-pick like I do. Or get too caught up in the “developing romance” to notice the plot is just sort of happening in a semi-inorganic way that is completely awkward.