Rabu, 05 Agustus 2020

Best Lessons In Corruption: A Student/Teacher Romance (The Fallen Men Book 1) By Giana Darling

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Lessons In Corruption: A Student/Teacher Romance (The Fallen Men Book 1)-Giana Darling

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From Wall Street Journal bestselling author Giana Darling comes a forbidden student/teacher relationship between the son of notorious MC President and his prim and proper teacher...He was eighteen. The heir to a notorious, criminal MC. And my student. There was no way I could get involved. No way I could stay involved. Then, no way I could get out alive.A MC student/teacher romance with an age gap. A standalone novel in The Fallen Men Series.

Book Lessons In Corruption: A Student/Teacher Romance (The Fallen Men Book 1) Review :



A lot of people love this book it seems, even Justirishgirl, whose reviews I stalk because we have such similar tastes, loved this book. So it came as a complete surprise to me that I just did not wholeheartedly love this book. Don’t get me wrong there are some great things about this book. The plot is fantastic. The first chapter draws you in immediately. Cressida sees King for the first time across a grocery store parking lot. She is literally frozen in place as she stares at him. It was an amazing love-at-first-sight moment that had my heart pounding. The reader falls in love with King at that moment as well and he never disappoints.Darling’s writing was also great. There are some editing issues that mostly have the feel of spellcheck substituting a wrong word kind of thing rather than true grammatical errors. I found the writing itself very pleasing. Two of my favorite passages:“I wanted his tongue and teeth to write his poems on my skin, wicked ones written in bruises and sweat, flourished with tears and cum.”“...I felt eyes on me. It didn’t make any sense but I knew the texture of the gaze, the way they fell hot on my skin then slid possessively through my hair, over my cheeks and neck like a physical caress. There were words in that gaze, ones that spoke of deviant plans for my body, promised that they would one day come true.”Wow! Great writing. So what was not great for me? The heroine. I just did not like the heroine. I did not like the way she treated King. At first it was fine. She found out he was involved with a MC and she balked. Ok, understandable. Then she finds out he is only 18 and her student and she balks again. Ok, even more understandable but then she keeps vacillating back and forth long past when she should have stuck beside King, long past the point where I found it understandable or even interesting for that matter. I also found her fairly rude. She would say something not very nice to King or a member of the MC and then apologize often citing her judgmental upbringing as the justification for her rudeness. That got old too. King does some amazingly thoughtful and loving things for her and almost every time her first reaction is to get mad and say something horrible to him. Apparently, after a lifetime of being taken care of, first by her parents and then her much older husband, Cressida wants so much to be independent that she sees even acts of kindness and caring as an infringement upon her independence. I really did not like some of the ungrateful and mean things she said to King. One of the last times she walked away from King was when he had just been injured and needed her love and support, but instead she leaves him in front of his family. I truly hated her then and I do not know why the other characters did not hate her too.I also found Cressida to be a bit of a hypocrite. There is a scene where she gets mad at a popular jock from a wealthy albeit abusive family for hiding the fact that he is gay. She lays into him because he is not yet openly gay and is hiding his relationship with one of her favorite students. She tells him how unfair he is being by being treating his boyfriend like he is ashamed of him and their relationship. She essentially forces the boy into outing his relationship. I could not believe it. The boy was just a teenager. He lived in a home with an abusive, homophobic father. He was a senior about to go to college which his father would probably have financed. She seemed to have zero empathy for him and his fears when in fact she was treating King the same way he was treating his boyfriend. King was 18 so her relationship with him was not illegal. She was worried about her reputation and losing her job if people found out. She was worried about money. In fact, she was plagued by exactly the same fears as the boy yet she never seemed to have that epiphany. I could not believe how self righteous she acted toward the boy.Finally, I did not like how she treated her brother. He killed a man protecting her which landed him in prison for 6 years. He lent Cressida money to buy her cottage when she left her husband even though it turns out he did not really have the money to spare. Yet, she turns her back on him because she is angry over some of his actions. I agreed that what he did was wrong but where was the unconditional love? I thought she should have forgiven him and loved him anyway. He clearly loved her.This book is only from Cressida’s POV so perhaps if I could have seen her from King’s POV I would not have ended up disliking her so much, maybe he could have shown me something redeemable about her.My final complaint is about King’s role in the MC. He is the son of the president but not a patched-in member and yet he seems to give a lot of orders to the patched-in brothers. King is involved in their business, goes to church meetings, and even has an Old Lady. Now, the only thing I actually know about MC’s and their rules and structure is what I have read in books so perhaps this is an accurate representation. However, let me just say, that this is not the normal for behavior in most of the books of this genre and it struck a discordant note with me.So, although I liked both the plot and the writing style, I just did not love this book and I am on the fence about reading the next.
This book didn't do it for me and I found myself skimming a handful of times. I see that a lot of people really enjoyed it and think quite highly of it so you may want to take my review with a grain of salt and give this book a try anyway.Lessons in Corruption is a motorcycle club and teacher/student taboo book with the female main character, Cressida Irons, older than the male main character, King Kyle Garro. There is a small to moderate age gap of 8 years. Cressida is 26 and King is 18. King is a very bright student in advanced classes at a prestigious school where Cressida teaches. King is also the son of The Fallen MC's President. The book is told from Cress' POV.Here are some of the reasons that I decided to rate the book as 2 stars:1) Starting with the thing that I just couldn't seem to get past no matter how hard I tried...I would really like to know how much Kristen Ashley this author reads. Since I have read somewhere around 30 KA books, I am well versed in how her alpha males speak. There is a very distinct way in which they have what I have heard other's dub "cave-man speak" and for KA books, it really seems to work and flow well. Unfortunately, in Lessons in Corruption, it didn't work at all. Not only did it sound like some were actual word for word quotes of some KA men, but it just didn't seem like that is how 18 year old King would really speak. It wasn't believable. It was the things he said, the way he said them, even the hand on the back of Cressida's neck when he wanted her to pay attention. To me, I felt it was a rip off of KA heroes. I'm not saying that KA is the only author who can write that way and have their men speak that way, but if an author is going to do it, I would like it to seem real and believable for the character."You with me then?” “Yeah, I’m with you”“Don’t like repeatin’ myself”"“Shut up, I wasn’t finished,” King growled, stepping close to me so that he could lean down into my face. The only thing that kept his posture from being totally threatening was the hand that found its way to the back of my neck, under my hair. I realized that he did it when he wanted to connect with me, when he needed to reassure both of us that I was his."2)I just couldn't get on board with King's character being believable. I understand that he has already been around a lot by the time he turned 18 and was very mature for his age, but even still, the things he said just weren't reconciling with the fact that he is an 18 year old guy."I may be a high school student but like I told you, I’m a man. We see where this goes and we like it, I’m into babies and in a way that’s more than just likin’ the idea of planting them in you.”3)I'm good with suspending reality to allow the author creative liberties in a story but even when they aren't believable, I still want them to feel as though it is possible. There were aspects of this book that didn't work for me because I kept saying, "Yeah, right!" or "that's not possible."I don't want to give away any spoiler type scenes so I will only talk about one instance where King lands in jail because what is a MC book without a brief jail visit? That should come as no surprise to anyone.“I can’t believe this,” I breathed shakily. “I can’t believe you’re here.” -There is no way he would be in jail and available for visitation this quickly. He hasn't even had time to be processed or arraigned."He let me kiss them, cupped one against my cheek while the other found its home around the back of my neck. I closed my eyes to better absorb his touch." -I guess it is one of those jails that allows the inmates to be touchy freely with the visitors....but why stop there, let's start showing skin too."So, I carefully rolled up the left edge of my bookish tee (this one with the cover of 1984 because I felt it was fitting for visiting a prison) and exposed the taped white bandage over the side of my ribs." -Then she removed the bandage. Not a chance of the guards allowing this in the visiting room.4)There were several editing mistakes but for the most part I was still able to follow the story and knew what was intended to be said.-There was one part where a character, Harleigh Rose, was discussed/mentioned before we were even introduced to that character. That threw me and I had to stop to see if I missed something because I had no clue who she was to Zeus.-There were minor story detail continuity issues such as toward the end when Zeus called Cress Queenie and she said it was the first time he had used the club's nickname for her as though it was an important moment in their relationship, but it wasn't the first time he referred to her by her nickname. He also called her Queenie during the mandatory town-hall at the school.5)There was a lot of redundancy as well as a lot of push and pull from Cressida. Speaking of redundancy, is it really necessary to compare and contrast King's and Zeus' eyes the first several times Zeus was in a scene. With all of the "you are my man, no you can't be my man, you are just a boy, I'm your old lady, we are not together," type moments, you'd think that eye color thing wouldn't matter, but it annoyed me nonetheless."Because I was looking for it, I saw the flash of humor light his eyes, nearly the same color as his son’s but more silver than pale blue."6)I felt the best scenes and the most interesting stuff all happened to include King's father, Zeus. He is my favorite character from this book and I felt that there was a believability with his interactions that was much more genuine. Zeus was great. I think he will make a great main character for his book.The things that I did like from the book:1)Family and loyalty within the MC.2)Zeus. I just all around loved everything about him.3)The interactions that Cressida had with her students and how much she enjoyed teaching.4)I liked that King was smart, loving, loyal, and passionate.5)The cover is greatEveryone's reading experience is their own and just because this book didn't work for me, doesn't mean that it was a bad book or that you shouldn't try it out for yourself. I think I will probably even read book two since I liked Zeus so much...

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Best Lessons In Corruption: A Student/Teacher Romance (The Fallen Men Book 1) By Giana Darling Rating: 4.5 Diposkan Oleh: zackarymal

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