Reviews

The Nightlife: Las Vegas by Travis Luedke

slanderoid's review against another edition

Go to review page

adventurous dark fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

0.75


Expand filter menu Content Warnings

berls's review

Go to review page

2.0

My Initial Reaction...
I had mixed feelings about picking up Las Vegas after the conclusion of New York and as it turns out, I probably should have trusted my gut. The series has just become too brutal for me.

The Characters....
The characters were a particularly disappointing note for me in Las Vegas, since so much of what I'd liked about both Aaron and Michelle in New York disappeared in this book. Aaron had been this very caring, almost gentle soul. There was so much about him that showed how he cared for other people. This was all but gone in Las Vegas. I was worried that this might happen because of the events of the last book, but underestimated how much it would bother me. At some level, I think I was supposed to believe that he loved and truly cared for Anastasia - his new "pet" - but the very fact that he took her as a pet in the first place exposed how untrue that was. Being inside his mind wasn't the same as it had been and I found a predator who looked at humans only as play things instead of a vampire who truly wanted to use his skills to treat people well.

Michelle, too, changed. Not to the extent that Aaron did - since we saw a bit of her viciousness in New York - but she'd had a conscience before and I felt like it completely disappeared in Las Vegas. The woman who'd once been so careful and scolded Aaron so harshly for making the mistake of drinking too long now seemed to have no real qualms about taking on a pet. Yes, she - like Aaron - cared for Anastasia, but again it felt very superficial.

Anastasia (or Ana), as a whole was a very flat character for me. She was brutalized as a child and basically turned into your stereotypical victim. There was such potential in her - not only in her background, but also in her being a gypsy with supernatural abilities, that just wasn't developed. I mean we heard she had the abilities at the beginning and then nothing really becomes of it, as she becomes nothing more than a cherished sex slave. One of the most interesting elements presented in New York was the idea of a blood slave - which Ana becomes - and that also just fell kind of flat for me. Being a blood slave basically was nothing more than being a drug addict, but your drug is vampire venom and sex.

The Story...
Ok, so I've just been really harsh about the characters - so why am I giving this two stars? Because of the story and the way it lived up to expectations for an erotica. First of all, the sex was mostly really good. There were points where it crossed over from sexy to way too brutal and savage for me - the lines between erotic rough sex and violence got a bit too blurred for me. And I really don't have any taste for sexual punishment or brutality (I'm not talking consensual D/s, but actual sexual brutality), even if it seems "justified" (I guess in my book it's NEVER justified...). But when we were safely within those lines, I found the sex scenes fairly enjoyable. Adding Anastasia to the mix did create some, uh, interesting scenarios.

There was an actual plot too - which sometimes there isn't in an erotica. Aaron used his mind reading abilities to gamble VERY successfully and put them on the wrong people's radar. Enter violence, drugs, and of course more sex. Most the plot was pretty predictable and obvious, but there were a couple of surprises - partly because I didn't see things going that way and partly because I just don't think quite that viciously. It got pretty graphically violent at points.

Concluding Sentiments...
Unfortunately this will be it for me and this series. I have a pretty high threshold - IMO - for gore and violence, but it just didn't work for me in Las Vegas.

*This book may be unsuitable for people under 17 years of age due to its use of sexual content, drug and alcohol use, and/or violence.*

I received this book for free from Author in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

see_sadie_read's review

Go to review page

4.0

I'd call this a 3.5.

I really loved [b:The Nightlife: New York|15980525|The Nightlife New York (The Nightlife, #1)|Travis Luedke|https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1349103205s/15980525.jpg|21732686] and anticipating liking this one just as much. Such was not the case, however. Luedke's writing is just as crisp and wonderful here as it was in the first, but a lot of what I really appreciated about the first book didn't carry over into this one. Most notable was Aaron's innocence. This was one of my favourite aspects of The Nightlife: New York. It seemed to have been replaced in The Nightlife: Las Vegas by The Predator. While I liked The Predator's protective nature and general badassness it was no substitute for the nice-guy feel that was lost.

Similarly, there was a lot of sex in this book. There was plenty in the first one too and I have no problem with sex (and Luedke can write one hot scene), but here it started to crowd out the plot a little bit. A good 30% of the book passed between meeting the antagonist the first time and him taking any action toward Aaron and Michelle. There was very little in the intermediate 30% but sex of every imaginable sort. Plus it all felt a little one sided. Michelle, Aaron, and Ana are all about reckless abandon, but apparently only with girls. Never once is another man brought into the mix. There are countless women and just Aaron's 'sole penis,' four on one at one point. It didn't feel very natural. As one should probably expect of Las Vegas it all takes a bit of a turn toward the depraved too. No longer are the pages full of Aaron's appreciation of Michelle's beauty and sexuality, instead they are littered with what every power-hungery, scumbag would like to do to 'that piece of ass,' 'whore,' 'tramp,' 'slut,' etc. I didn't find this to be an improvement. It felt like something indefinable had been corrupted.

The ending was fairly predictable, but the addition of the new character Michael intrigued me. I'd be interested in knowing where that plot line goes.
More...