![]() ![]() In the novel, he was wooed by a secret lover in the dark (Grim) while striking away from his family to do what he really loved and what gave him purpose, solving mysteries in the paranormal world. As readers of the series will know, in Dance in the Dark each chapter is set up as a new case for Johnnie, orphaned and raised in an extremely powerful vampire family. Though the blurb makes it seem as if Peyton is the MC in this story, that really isn't the case. But once I was reacquainted, I was so happy to revisit Johnnie and Grim. I love this series, but Dance in the Dark was one of my very favorites, and even then I had a hard time remembering which storyline and characters went with which when you compile all of the different plots and characters over the series. ![]() I was still a bit lost, actually, when I started this. All of the character building and relationships are forged in the novel, and I would have been lost if I had not read it first. It is important to read that novel first, because this short story does not stand on it's own. The Dance with the Devil series has several books that are only loosely related to one another by worldbuilding, so Ruffskin follows immediately after Dance in the Dark and deals with the same characters. ![]() Review posted at Brief Encounters Reviews. ![]()
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