Reviews tagging 'Sexual violence'

Bitten by Kelley Armstrong

2 reviews

booksthatburn's review against another edition

Go to review page

emotional mysterious tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

Elena has been trying to live as a human, but it quickly becomes apparent (to the reader, if not to herself) that her life in Toronto among the humans and with a boyfriend has been an exercise in making her smell self small enough to fit into what she thinks a human woman ought to be. When a mutt (a werewolf outside the pack) starts trespassing and leaving dead humans in the Pack's woods, Elena is called back to help them track down the mutt and put a stop to their activities. For all its dangers, she clearly revels in the camaraderie and safety provided by the pack. Her relationship with Clayton is tumultuous, vibrant and toxic by turns, but it's obvious both how much each of them care for the other, and how hard it is for him to change. 

I read this because one of my favorite authors recommended the third book in this series, and I'm a completionist who wouldn't be able to stand starting with book three, so I began here. I'm very glad I did. While some of the relationship dynamics haven't aged particularly well, I was pleasantly surprised by how much of it holds up in content, structure, and tone. It's also a snapshot of the 1990's, with cell phones available but low in signal quality, and only a hint of the internet. Elena is the sole female werewolf, a detail that I thought was a bit of a gimmick until I learned that in this series there are fewer than 50 werewolves in the world at any one time. This is possible because hereditary werewolves are all male, interbreeding with humans to produce offspring who then grew up in the pack. It's a neat way of having a small, scrappy species with numbers that edge close to extinction but aren't actually in danger of succumbing to a genetic bottleneck. The other way to create new werewolves is to bite a human, which is what happened to Elena a decade before the story begins. Her survival made her the only female werewolf, as the odds of surviving the bite generally are low, and she was bitten under the best possible conditions to have support through her first few changes.

As the first book in the series, this has a self-contained narrative which arrives at a new status quo by the end. Several major plot points are resolved, but the possibilities created by the ending make me very interested in what the sequels might hold. I like narratives where two very stubborn people gradually try to fit together. While I wouldn't actually want to be in this relationship, it's very fun to read about.

I love the audiobook narrator's performance, especially the voice for Clayton, his tone is captured perfectly. I plan to keep reading the series, and am interested in where it goes next.

Expand filter menu Content Warnings

sup3r_xn0va_maya's review against another edition

Go to review page

adventurous dark mysterious sad tense slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.0

Bitten by Kelley Armstrong is the first novel in her Women of the Otherworld series of paranormal romance stories. The book was okay, there were some things I didn't like and there were some things I liked. 

Bitten is the story of a female werewolf named Elena. She has a pack that she used to run with but she's been trying to live more like a human so the book starts off with her a Canadian city. She lives with her boyfriend and works for a popular news paper. One day Elena gets a call from the pack leader tell her that he needs her back in the area, because there have been a few murders in their territory. The story goes on from there. 

I found the main character to be a little dim in some situations.
At one point Elena is being held at gun point by a known child molester. She had previously broken his wrist in the scene before and she did it to prove a point to him and now he is angry with her and threatening to kill. For some dumb reason Elena doesn't believe that this man will kill, let alone shoot her. She doesn't believe it until...you guessed it, until he finally shoots her.


The book was entertain in certain parts and boring in others, I don't think it needed to be over 500 pages. There wasn't enough going on for there to be 500 pages worth of entertaining story, unfortunately. There was also a scene at the beginning of the book, with the main character and an ex, where there is a dubious consent sex scene. It was really unpleasant to read. The the main character begins to blame herself for "cheating on her boyfriend". This part was terribly outdated, he basically assaulted her and she blames herself and there's no one to help her through the self blame. 

Because of the dubious consent at the beginning of this novel, even though there were consensual sex scenes later in the novel they felt uncomfortable. I'm giving this 🌶️🌶️ two chilies out of five chilies worth of spice, I don't care if the later scenes were supposed to be sexy, they just weren't because of the initial dubious consent.  

This novel was honestly too long and I didn't like that there was dubious consent, so I can't give this any higher than 3 stars out of 5.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ 3/5 Stars

I read this for free on [Libbyapp.com]

Expand filter menu Content Warnings