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When a strange woman shows up outside our camp in the Wastes with monsters chained up to her RV, it feels like I’m the only one who actually wants to help them. That big, grey-skinned monster with the cage on his head and the chain hanging from his back—something is telling me I need to help him. I need to free him. But I have absolutely no idea how I’m supposed to do that, especially when he can’t even talk to me to tell me how. Collector Mary is finally leaving our camp to head back to her monster menagerie, so I do the only thing I can think of to help him. I go with her. Now, this big beastie and I are traveling companions for the foreseeable future. Now I just have to think of a way to get that cage off his head, which seems like an impossible task. But I’m not giving up. He has no one else, and when I start to discover who he is beneath the cage, my motivation to free him becomes far more than just a desire to help. This is so dangerous. The military is lurking. Vicious monsters are lurking. And when Mary turns out to be even worse than we could have ever imagined, my desperate bid to save this monster turns into a deadly game of cat and mouse. I’m pretty sure I’m going to die out here. Gloam is Book Four of the Monstrous series, a post-apocalyptic m/m fantasy series that features monsters and human men falling in love. It is best to read the series in order. Warning: This m/m love story contains explicit sexual content and is not suitable for young readers. It also contains graphic depictions of torture and violence.
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-This was an okay installment. it was unclear why Rig was so determined to help Gloam other than his goodness? fated mates element?
- Rig went from being a cinnamon roll to a dumb golden retriever along the way; himbo, repetitive
- I personally did not care much for the writing and how it was back and forth - wasn't enough emotional development, but okay
- I felt like the cult aspect came from nowhere, was this just to introduce as a concept for future books? Moth, Samson Etc
- Gloam’s brothers were there, but it was too easy how Rig escaped
- I guess half of this series’ monsters have "magic”, but somehow the ‘cursed because she knows my true name’ Fae bullshit felt dumber than other books?
- I wanted more communication and emotional development, sex was decent overall. Gloam was a sweetie pie
- this was easy to read and generally entertaining
- Gloam's sweetness did remind me of Aury, though sometimes Gloam was boring - it might be cool to have a mean monster
-Multiple reviewers did say how similar number three and number four were to each other, and I am ready for the change that hopefully is coming
- I kind of wanted to see more from Mary and her menagerie?
- the sex was fine, not memorable