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Tiffany Aching is starting her witch training. But in preparing herself, she attracts the attention of a hiver, a being who takes over other beings and unleashes their worst selfs. Can Tiffany learn what she needs to learn, while avoiding the searching of a deadly being who wants to control her, a being she doesn't even know is after her? Luckily, the Wee Free Men are aware of the problem and are more than willing to help her, if only their new kelda will let them. All the Tiffany Aching books are excellent, but this one may be my favorite. It is functionally about what to do once you realize that you are very good at something. There are loads of books about how to become good at something, and many more about how to accept your inferiority, but I'm only aware of this (and Oedipus Rex) as an exploration of excessive competence and what it does to us. And young, smart women very likely have reasons for their feelings of superiority and a desperate need to understand what it means. This is the book for them. Just an excellent coming-of-age novel, for all ages and genders. I cannot recommend it enough. Go read it, now!

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Finding Eden is a prequel to Beyond Eden, which came out last year. In this book we discover how Paul and Danny’s relationship started, and just to what extent Paul goes to feel pain. Paul and Danny have been friends for a long time and they both are in love with the same girl Eve. But Eve leaves to go off to college. (Beyond Eden starts with Eve coming home ten years later) Paul and Danny are left floundering in her absence. Paul and Danny both don’t have the greatest home life. Paul’s father is a marine and expects his son to act a certain way. Danny’s father is an alcoholic and even though his mother tries to make up for it, Danny can’t stand to be at home. Danny is bi-sexual, and very, very good at pleasing both men and women in bed. He has always been very attracted to Paul, but has never let on. That is until he discovers what Paul has been up to. Because of a childhood filled with never being good enough, Paul has an extreme pain fetish – and put in the hands of an inexperienced or irresponsible Dom, things go very south for Paul quick. He refuses to use a safe word, and the Dom goes too far. Danny puts an end to it, but Paul needs someone to submit too, and wants Danny to be that person. But Danny doesn’t know if he has it in him, but wants to care for his friend more than anything in the world. Finding Eden really explores how Paul and Danny fall into a physical relationship and how Danny finally decides to become the Dom that Paul needs. This can definitely be read as a stand alone, however it ends with not a lot of resolution. If you read Beyond Eden, most of that resolution is resolved with the HEA. I still think Kele Moon is able to write another book that takes place before Beyond Eden because although this one explores Paul’s submission, we still don’t see how Danny comes to be this extraordinary Dom. And that is something I would love to see. We get some very hot sex scenes – Kele Moon is one of my favorites for how she writes her sex scenes. Very intense, erotic and just plain out sexy. I’m more of a fan of m/m than m/m/f (which is the case for Beyond Eden) so I was happy to just have m/m scenes in this book. I don’t think the emotional depth is as great as the first book, although I think Paul’s desperation to find who he is is portrayed well. And Danny rides that line of being a total jerk…but not. I love his alpha behavior. He is kind of nasty, but it works so well for him…and Paul. Through this book Danny must decide if the next place his life goes is learning how to be Paul’s dominant. I wish we would have seen more of that. It ends rather abruptly, and I would have loved to see that part of Danny explored more. This is a darker, erotic, bdsm book but I actually think I was taken more out of my comfort zone with Beyond Eden rather than this one. Or maybe I just knew what to expect more. Either way, both books I recommend Rating: B