This is a spoiler-free review! Beautiful Venom contains themes of consensual non-con, dub-con, and primal play. It also includes on-page depictions of road accident-related trauma and violence.
You can read my reviews of the entire Legacy of Gods series on my blog, now: God of Malice, God of Pain, God of Wrath, God of Ruin, God of Fury, and God of War. You can also read my review of Kiss the Villain on my blog!
I do not even know what I was thinking... a dark hockey romance... it is hockey, for crying out loud. It is an idea almost as ridiculous as the basketball players the town are supposed to fear in the Devil's Night series. Nevertheless, I was intrigued and needed to see how this book played out - honestly, anything hockey-related is fine to get me through the Heated Rivalry drought. I will take what I can get at this point. Unfortunately, all hockey romance is ruined for me as nothing will ever live up to Shane and Ilya, so I must accept future disappoint from other books. And it appears that this was the very case with this book.
Boy, does Rina Kent LOVE an initiation.... thought I was finally free from reading about them and yet here we go again. This one was definitely somehow more uncomfortable to read unlike the ones in Legacy of Gods - there was just something about it that made it feel more humiliating for Dahlia on a scale that took me out of the "fantasy" of the book and launched me back into reality. I was screaming that this girl needed to file a police report by the end of those chapters. Kane is basically a Shein version of Jeremy Volkov from Legacy of Gods and it was physically painful to read him calling Dahlia "wildflower" as a term of endearment when it honestly read like more of an insult.
The whole secret society aspect of this book would have been intriguing if it actually lead anywhere interesting. Instead, it leaves readers with glimpses into some corrupt dealings with these leading members of the town that conveniently are composed as the star hockey players that basically terrorize people for fun. While I am a lover of dark romance and fully understand that genre is Kent's cup of tea, it just seems as though she begins the concepts strong in the summaries but often times it results in the ideas not coming to fruition in the end, leaving readers wanting more. That being said, God of Fury and Kiss the Villain are definitely her best works - of the ones that I have read so far - so when I heard you needed to read Kiss the Villain before reading Beautiful Venom, I thought some of that storyline would come into play here.
Dahlia is probably one of the most insufferable and weak-minded female leads that I have ever come across, and that is saying something. She's championed by the author as being this badass lead that is set on seeking out revenge on the person who hurt her foster sister, but she basically abandons that crusade at numerous points during the book in favor of being ravaged by Kane and being at his mercy. I wanted to like her and admire her determination in getting justice for Violet, but her character read as insincere and naive.
Kane is honestly no better than Killian Carson from God of Malice - I wanted to strangle him at numerous points and honestly hated his attitude for the majority of the book. It is more so the way that he is written rather than his actions - considering the L.O.R.D.S series has characters doing the unimaginable and I still root for them, that says a lot. Do I feel bad for all of the horrors that he went through since he was younger? Sure, absolutely. Do I think that he should have used that as a constant justification for all of the crazy and illegal things he does? No way. He definitely got justice for some of the things that were done to him, and I agree with the way he went about it, but ultimately Dahlia had to suffer in order for it to happen.
The only remotely interesting side plot line that was present in this book was Kane's friend group being little menaces all the time. They somehow were able to provide some mild comedic relief and while they were no angels in any means, they definitely seemed to have some backbone - maybe not Preston - but at least the others. Frankly, this book put me into a slump and I had to force myself to sit down and try to power through, which is a shame considering I was able to consume some of her other works fairly quickly. I can only hope the remaining books in this series improves upon the story readers had to endure with this installment.
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