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Bumblebee Millipede (Anadenobolus monilicornis)

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Description

Bumblebee Millipede (Anadenobolus monilicornis)Bumblebee Millipedes are properly one of the most visually distinctive small millipedes in the UK hobby a Caribbean species with bold black and yellow banded colouration that genuinely lives up to the "bumblebee" common name. Anadenobolus monilicornis combines striking aposematic patterning, easy beginner friendly husbandry, and a properly active surface behaviour. At 2. 57 cm adult length, they're a much smaller millipede than the African giants that

Bumblebee Millipedes are properly one of the most visually distinctive small millipedes in the UK hobby — a Caribbean species with bold black-and-yellow banded colouration that genuinely lives up to the "bumblebee" common name. Anadenobolus monilicornis combines striking aposematic patterning, easy beginner-friendly husbandry, and a properly active surface behaviour. At 2.5–7 cm adult length, they're a much smaller millipede than the African giants that dominate most UK catalogues — properly suited to nano enclosures, classroom displays, and bioactive setups where the substantial Spirostreptidae would be impractical.

This is part of our wider millipede collection and represents a properly different proposition from our African giants. As our first Caribbean/Neotropical millipede offering, Bumblebee Millipedes open up new biogeographic territory in the catalogue — Caribbean rainforest and karst-zone invertebrates rather than the African tree savannah origins of our Burmese Beauty, Ghana Olive, and African Giant Chocolate Millipedes. For collectors building diverse millipede displays across geographic regions, this is properly one of the right additions.

One framing point worth understanding up front. Bumblebee Millipedes are aposematic — the bold black-and-yellow banding warns potential predators that the animal is chemically defended. Like all Spirobolida, the species produces benzoquinone defensive secretions when stressed, properly different chemistry from the hydrogen cyanide of our Polydesmida millipedes (the Pink Dragon and Thai Rainbow). To set things up properly from the start, browse our accessories collection for substrate components, leaf litter, and other items this species depends on.

Quick Care Summary

  • Scientific Name: Anadenobolus monilicornis (von Porat, 1876)
  • Common Names: Bumblebee Millipede, Yellow-banded Millipede, Yellow-banded Bumblebee Millipede
  • Class: Diplopoda; order Spirobolida; family Rhinocricidae
  • Genus context: Anadenobolus contains multiple Caribbean and Neotropical species. A. monilicornis is by far the most widely-traded member of the genus in UK hobby contexts. Considered the most common millipede in the karst zones of Puerto Rico
  • Origin: Native to the Caribbean — Greater Antilles (excepting Cuba), Lesser Antilles (Barbados, Trinidad and Tobago, St. Maarten, St. Kitts), Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname, Brazil. Introduced to southeastern United States (Florida, where it's been treated as a pest since first discovered in Monroe County in 2001) and parts of Central America
  • Adult Size: 2.5–7 cm typically (Wikipedia gives 2.5–3 cm; specialist sources report up to 5–7 cm; maximum specimens around 10 cm). Properly small by hobby millipede standards — about a fifth to a third the length of our African giants
  • Lifespan: 3–5 years typical in good captive conditions
  • Difficulty: Easy — properly one of the most beginner-friendly millipedes in the UK hobby. Hardy, forgiving, prolific breeder
  • Temperature: 22–28 °C — properly tropical. UK winter heating typically required
  • Humidity: 70–90% — high humidity throughout
  • Body shape: Cylindrical, properly typical Spirobolida proportions but on a smaller scale than the African giants
  • Body colour: Dark brown to black base with bold bright yellow to lime-green bands across each body segment. The contrast is properly striking — genuinely the visual reference for the "bumblebee" common name
  • Legs and antennae: Red to maroon — provides additional colour contrast against the black-and-yellow body
  • Defensive chemistry: Produces benzoquinone secretions when stressed — released as a dark fluid that can stain hands and may cause skin irritation. Properly the standard Spirobolida defence chemistry
  • Diet: Opportunistic detritivore — decaying plant material, dead wood, fallen fruits, seeds, mushrooms, occasional faeces and dead invertebrates
  • Breeding: Properly prolific in captivity. Multiple generations per year possible under good conditions
  • Rarity: Common in UK hobby — widely captive-bred, established hobby species

What Makes Bumblebee Millipedes Special

The colouration. The bold black-and-yellow banding is properly one of the most striking patterns in the hobby millipede world. Each body segment shows a clear yellow ring against the dark brown-to-black base, creating a properly distinctive bumblebee-style alternating pattern. Combined with the red-to-maroon legs and antennae, the overall colour contrast is genuinely dramatic for such a small animal.

The aposematic warning system. The bright yellow bands aren't decorative — they're aposematic warning colouration telling potential predators that the animal is chemically defended. The pattern is properly effective: birds and captive monkeys have been observed crushing Bumblebee Millipedes specifically to extract their defensive secretions and rub them on wings or fur as insect repellent (documented in scientific literature). This is genuinely one of the more remarkable predator-prey interactions in the millipede world — the chemistry is so effective that some predators have evolved to exploit rather than avoid it.

The size advantage. At 2.5–7 cm adult length, Bumblebee Millipedes are properly suited to enclosures where the substantial African giants would be impractical. A 5–10 litre tub can comfortably house a small breeding group, properly accessible to keepers with limited space, students, classrooms, or anyone wanting nano-scale invertebrate keeping without compromising on visual character.

The beginner-friendly biology. Despite the dramatic appearance, Bumblebee Millipede husbandry is genuinely straightforward. Standard tropical conditions (warm, humid), wide dietary acceptance, hardy constitution, tolerant of moderate husbandry variation. They breed properly readily in captivity and are forgiving of beginner mistakes in ways that more demanding species aren't. For first-time millipede keepers, this is genuinely one of the right entry points.

The Caribbean biogeography. As our first Caribbean/Neotropical millipede, Bumblebee Millipedes open up properly different biogeographic territory from the African giants that dominate UK invertebrate keeping. The Caribbean has its own distinctive invertebrate fauna shaped by island biogeography, volcanic geology, and tropical forest ecology — properly different ecological context from the African tree savannah origins of Telodeinopus aoutii or the West African rainforest origins of Ophistreptus guineensis. For collectors interested in geographic diversity, this represents meaningful catalogue expansion.

The prolific breeding character. Bumblebee Millipedes are properly one of the more readily-bred species in the hobby. Multiple generations per year are possible under good conditions, and established colonies become genuinely self-sustaining. For keepers wanting visible population growth and successful breeding without specialist intervention, this is one of the right millipede choices.

The position in our millipede catalogue. Bumblebee Millipedes occupy a properly distinct niche compared to other catalogue offerings:

  • Smaller than the African giants — accessible to nano-enclosure setups
  • More colourful than most Spirobolida — bold aposematic pattern rather than uniform dark colour
  • Less concentrated chemistry than Polydesmida — benzoquinones rather than hydrogen cyanide
  • Easier breeding than premium species — properly suited to keepers wanting active population growth

About the Name and the Taxonomy

The naming and taxonomic context deserves proper transparency.

  • Anadenobolus monilicornis: Described by Carl Wilhelm von Porat in 1876 as Spirobolus monilicornis, later transferred to Anadenobolus. The species epithet "monilicornis" properly references the bead-like (Latin "monile" = necklace) appearance of the antennae
  • Common names:
    • Bumblebee Millipede: Hobby trade name referencing the black-and-yellow banded colouration. Widely used in UK and US contexts
    • Yellow-banded Millipede: Used in scientific literature and natural history contexts. Properly descriptive of the diagnostic feature
  • Family Rhinocricidae: Properly distinct from the Spirostreptidae family containing our African giant millipedes (Telodeinopus aoutii, Spirostreptus sp., Ophistreptus guineensis, etc.). Rhinocricidae is largely Neotropical in distribution; species range from very small (under 3 cm) to medium-sized (around 15 cm)
  • Order Spirobolida context: Same order as our Red Ring Millipede (family Pachybolidae) and Amber Millipede (also Pachybolidae) — properly related but in different families. All Spirobolida share benzoquinone defensive chemistry; visual presentation varies between families and species
  • Distinguishing from Anadenobolus chichen: A related species described from Chichén Itzá ruins in Mexico. Less well-documented than A. monilicornis; the two are sometimes confused in identification contexts. A. monilicornis is the species traded in UK hobby
  • Invasive status in Florida: First recorded in Monroe County in 2001; now established as a naturalised population in southeastern US, where it's treated as an agricultural pest in some contexts. UK keepers should note this isn't environmentally relevant for UK release (UK winters kill the species) but is worth knowing as context for the species's adaptability

Setting Up the Enclosure

Bumblebee Millipedes don't need substantial enclosures — their small size suits modest setups properly well. A 5–10 litre plastic or glass enclosure works for a starter group of 5–10 animals; larger setups support breeding colonies properly well.

Glass or plastic both work. A secure ventilated lid is essential — like all millipedes, Bumblebee Millipedes can climb smooth surfaces given enough effort. Cross-ventilation through mesh panels maintains airflow without compromising humidity.

Provide proper structure:

  • Substrate depth: 5–8 cm minimum (deeper for breeding setups) — supports burrowing and egg-laying
  • Cork bark pieces at various positions — flat hides and vertical climbing surfaces
  • Pieces of decaying hardwood throughout — both food and habitat
  • Generous leaf litter layer on the surface — properly essential. Browse our accessories range for leaf litter options
  • Optional: live tropical plants for a bioactive display setup
  • Springtails as cleanup crew — establishes microfauna and processes substrate. Browse our springtail collection

Substrate

Bumblebee Millipedes need moist, organic-rich substrate. The substrate is both habitat and primary food source:

  • Organic topsoil (pesticide-free, fertiliser-free) as the moisture-retaining foundation
  • Flake soil mixed in for additional nutrition
  • Crumbled decaying hardwood throughout — properly essential
  • Coconut fibre (coir) for moisture buffer
  • Surface layer of hardwood leaf litter — oak, beech, magnolia all work properly well. Browse our accessories collection for ready-prepared leaf litter
  • Optional sphagnum moss patches for moisture pockets
  • Calcium sources mixed throughout — cuttlebone, crushed eggshell, limestone. Our calcium options cover the full range

Substrate depth: 5 cm minimum, 8 cm preferred for breeding setups. While smaller than the African giants, Bumblebee Millipedes still burrow regularly — adequate depth supports natural behaviour.

Humidity and Temperature

Maintain humidity at 70–90%. Caribbean rainforest and karst-zone origins mean properly damp conditions are required. Daily light misting maintains the humidity level; the substrate provides longer-term moisture buffer. The substrate should always feel damp throughout without standing water.

Temperature should be 22–28 °C. UK ambient summer room temperature is generally suitable, but supplementary heating is typically needed through autumn-to-spring. A low-wattage heat mat on a thermostat, mounted on the side of the enclosure (not underneath), provides supplementary warmth. Don't let temperatures drop below 20 °C consistently — Bumblebee Millipedes are properly tropical and don't tolerate sustained cool conditions.

Diet

Bumblebee Millipedes are properly opportunistic detritivores with broad food acceptance. Primary diet:

  • Hardwood leaf litter — the dietary foundation. Always have generous amounts available. Browse our accessories collection for ready-prepared leaf litter
  • Decaying hardwood — both food and habitat structure
  • Fresh fruits — particularly well-received. Sliced apple, banana, mango, melon. Replace before mould develops
  • Fresh vegetables — cucumber, courgette, sweet potato, carrot, squash
  • Mushrooms and fungi — properly accepted; can be offered occasionally
  • Protein supplements occasionally — fish flakes, dried bloodworm. Offer sparingly
  • Calcium sources — cuttlebone, crushed eggshell, limestone. Our calcium options cover the full range

Multiple scientific sources note that higher-quality food (fruits, mushrooms) increases developmental rate, growth, and reproduction — so dietary variety isn't just for animal welfare, it genuinely supports colony health and breeding success.

Remove uneaten fresh food after 24–48 hours to prevent mould and mite issues.

Breeding

Bumblebee Millipedes are properly prolific breeders in captivity — genuinely one of the more reliably-bred species in the UK hobby. Established colonies become self-sustaining and can produce multiple generations per year under good conditions.

For breeding success:

  • Mixed-sex group of 6+ animals — increases chance of compatible pairings
  • Stable warm temperatures (24–27 °C)
  • Consistent high humidity (75–85%)
  • Deep substrate (8 cm+) with active microfauna
  • Continuous leaf litter and rotten wood supply
  • High-quality food (fruit, mushrooms) for improved reproductive rates
  • Calcium consistently available
  • Minimal disturbance — settled colonies breed more reliably

Juveniles emerge white and only a few millimetres long. The characteristic black-and-yellow banded colouration develops as juveniles mature through successive moults — adult patterning takes several months to develop fully. Don't expect immediate dramatic colouration in newly-hatched offspring.

Handling

Bumblebee Millipedes can be handled, but properly with awareness of the defensive chemistry. Like all Spirobolida, the species produces benzoquinone defensive secretions when stressed — released as a dark fluid that:

  • Can stain hands and surfaces (the staining is properly persistent — can take several days to fade)
  • May cause skin irritation in sensitive individuals
  • Has a distinctive smell that lingers

For routine handling:

  • Wash hands thoroughly before and after handling
  • Don't grip the animal tightly — this triggers defensive secretion. Support gently on flat palm
  • Avoid handling around face, eyes, or open wounds
  • Keep away from food preparation areas
  • Don't allow young children to handle millipedes unsupervised — the chemistry isn't dangerous at hobby-keeping levels but small children may not understand the wash-hands-afterwards requirement

The defensive chemistry isn't dangerous in the way Polydesmida hydrogen cyanide is (see our Pink Dragon Millipede for that level of concern), but it's properly real and worth respecting.

How Bumblebee Millipedes Compare to Other Catalogue Millipedes

If you're deciding where Bumblebee Millipedes fit alongside your other millipedes:

vs the African giants (Spirostreptidae cluster): Properly opposite end of the millipede size spectrum. Our African Giant Chocolate Millipede, Burmese Beauty, and others are long-lived (5–10 years), large (15–20+ cm), with subtle uniform colouration. Bumblebee Millipedes are smaller, shorter-lived, with dramatic banded colouration. Different size class, different geographic origin (Caribbean vs Africa), different visual character entirely.

vs Red Ring Millipede: Both are Spirobolida with aposematic banded colouration. Red Ring is Pachybolidae family, smaller body with red ring banding; Bumblebee is Rhinocricidae family, similar size with yellow bands. Both produce benzoquinone chemistry. For collectors wanting multiple banded Spirobolida species, these are properly complementary choices.

vs Amber Millipede: Amber is West African Pachybolidae with amber-orange colouration; Bumblebee is Caribbean Rhinocricidae with black-and-yellow banding. Both Spirobolida; different families and geographic origins.

vs the Polydesmida species (Pink Dragon, Thai Rainbow, Tiny Polydesmus): Properly different order. Polydesmida produce hydrogen cyanide defensive chemistry — significantly more concentrated than Bumblebee's benzoquinones. The Polydesmida species are also more visually distinctive in body shape (dragon-like) but smaller in size class. Different keeping experience entirely.

vs the African olive millipedes (Ghana Olive, Analocostreptus gregorius): Substantial size and Spirostreptidae heritage differences. African olives are 12–18 cm West African giants with subtle colouration; Bumblebee is 2.5–7 cm Caribbean species with dramatic banding. Properly different categories.

Who Should Buy Bumblebee Millipedes?

Ideal for:

  • First-time millipede keepers wanting an easy beginner-friendly species with visual character
  • Keepers with limited space — small enclosure suitable
  • Educational settings — classroom displays, biology demonstrations, aposematic colour examples
  • Display enthusiasts drawn to bold banded colouration
  • Bioactive vivarium builders wanting Caribbean-origin species
  • Collectors building cross-order, cross-family millipede displays
  • Keepers wanting prolific breeding species for population observation
  • Anyone interested in Caribbean biogeography and Neotropical invertebrate fauna

Not ideal for:

  • Setups without consistent tropical conditions (22 °C+ year-round)
  • Keepers wanting genuinely large display millipedes — choose African giants for scale
  • Anyone preferring constantly-handleable species — the benzoquinone chemistry rules out frequent handling
  • Keepers without leaf litter or rotting wood supply — the species needs substantial detritus

Realistic Expectations

They're properly small. Adult Bumblebee Millipedes top out at 7 cm in most cases (occasionally larger, but uncommonly). If you're expecting African giant scale, you'll find this species significantly smaller. The appeal is the colouration and breeding character, not the size. For keepers transferring expectations from larger species, the scale takes adjustment.

Colour develops through moulting. Newly-hatched juveniles are white and only a few millimetres long. The characteristic black-and-yellow banded colouration develops gradually through successive moults — full adult appearance takes several months. Don't be disappointed by initially understated juveniles.

The chemistry is genuinely real. Don't dismiss the benzoquinone secretions as a curiosity — they stain hands properly persistently and can irritate sensitive skin. Wash hands after handling and avoid handling around food preparation or face/eyes.

Population growth is genuinely rapid. Established Bumblebee Millipede colonies can produce hundreds of offspring per year under good conditions. If you want a stable small colony, plan for population management; if you want a self-sustaining breeding setup with visible generational change, this delivers properly well.

The aposematic colouration is genuine. The yellow-and-black banding warns predators of the chemical defences — this is properly evolutionary biology rather than incidental decoration. Birds and monkeys interact with Bumblebee Millipedes specifically for the defensive secretions (documented in scientific literature), which is properly one of the more interesting predator-prey relationships in the millipede world.

UK escape isn't an environmental risk. UK outdoor conditions are properly too cool for tropical Caribbean Rhinocricidae to establish wild populations. The species's introduction success in Florida is properly relevant only to subtropical climates — UK escapees won't establish wild populations. Recapture escapees promptly as colony preservation rather than environmental concern.

The Caribbean heritage is genuinely meaningful biogeography. Unlike most UK hobby millipedes which come from African source populations, Bumblebee Millipedes connect to Caribbean and Neotropical invertebrate fauna shaped by island biogeography and tropical rainforest ecology. For keepers interested in the geographic origins of hobby species, this represents properly different territory from the African Spirostreptidae that dominate UK trade.

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Ashton Taylor
Cuba, US
★★★★★ 3
I love indie authors
Format: Kindle
Let me preface this by saying—writing a book is HARD! Coming up with characters so real that they take on a life of their own, building an entire world, the political/magic system. Designing all of this is no easy feat. That being said. This book had so. Much. Potential. I was so excited to read this book, and I plan to finish it for the sake of finishing it. But. At this point, I would have set I’d aside as a DNF. The book could have benefited from some form of a developmental editor, or an in depth beta reader. I will say this. Within 5 chapters, there are so many… phrases that I’ve highlight that I’ve latched onto. Phrases about books and storms that were written BEAUTIFULLY! So, bravo Linton for hitting the nail on the head as to why readers disappear like they do! However, 5 chapters in and I can already guess where a majority of the story is going. But that’s also because I read like a mad-woman and have read this particular type of story, many different ways. Enemies to lovers where the FMC isn’t who she thinks she is. I am all about supporting indie authors. BUT. I also feel like criticism should be constructive, and not degrading. So if I could give this book a 4 1/2, strictly because I know the work the author put into this, I would. So if you’re looking for an easy read with characters that aren’t hard to follow, look no further! They are easy to love and easy to care for. One of the biggest issues they lacked, to me, was depth and plausible reactions to their situations. JD, you have done BEAUTIFULLY writing this book. I applaud and will continue to buy your books in the future. My BIGGEST recommendation is to definitely hire some form of an editor for any upcoming books. Or in turn, I will be happy to beta read for you. Should my opinion change of the book by the time I finish, I will happily get on here and say I was wrong, delete this review and post a different one. Until then…
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Reviewed in the United States on November 20, 2022
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Hannah Durham
Houston, US
★★★★★ 5
this book set my soul ablaze! <3
Format: Paperback, Format: Paperback
"i had never really cared about the weather before, but now, clear skies meant everything to me, and i was grateful to see another calm morning." this book. this book! i loved the last storm so much. the writing style. the descriptions. the world-building. the characters. the plot twists. the tropes. the sexual tension. the—everything. everything was magic. the last storm follows our two main characters, ara and rogue, giving us dual POV from both characters (which i loved, btw). ara, a human girl who has been locked away in her father’s estate most of her life, just wants to see the world. all she dreams of is seeing what else is out there. but when her father announces her engagement, she knows that dream will become nothing more than just that—a dream. rogue, the fae king, is tired of the attacks being rained down on his people. in hopes of finding out the human king adon’s secrets, rogue infiltrates auryna’s borders. in his last resort to gain information, he visits the local pub. to his surprise, the general’s precious only child is sitting at the bar, drink round after round of mead. now he just needs to figure out how to take her without anyone noticing. first and foremost, let’s talk about the endless list of my favorite tropes and aspects that this book had. ›› enemies to lovers ›› fated mates ›› one bed ›› the chosen one ›› elemental magic ›› actually good and shocking plot twists!!! ›› badass female lead ›› morally-grey love interest ›› fae/human war ›› force proximity ›› touch her and die ›› who did this to you? ›› captor/captive ›› praise k!nk (panting profusely) “you are entirely the opposite of everything that i am, and i would gladly wear your shackles if it meant i could have you.” it’s been a long while since i read a book i liked this much. but i just loved this book. it set my soul ablaze. thank you to the author for writing this beautiful story and for blessing me with an eARC! i loved it so much that i immediately bought the paperback upon release! every aspect of this book was just beautiful. i was blown away by the way the world was described, the way feelings were portrayed, the way the elements were used in the fae’s magic. it just—AHHH! i just absolutely adored it all. i cannot wait for the second book to release next year! also the way he calls her “little storm” sets my heart on fire. this was a fast-paced read and if you are a lover of acotar, fbaa, deal with the elf king, or any other similar books, then please stop everything you’re doing and read this book right now. you won’t regret it. thank you again, jd linton, for giving me the privilege of reading your arc and for blessing this world with the world you created. <3 "something about him pulled me in, like a moth to a flame, and it felt as if i was just waiting for the inevitable burn that came with flying too close to the fire."
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Reviewed in the United States on November 15, 2022
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Sean
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 4
Fun, both heartwarming and heartbreaking
Format: Kindle
Only my second first person written selection, I am still getting used to that aspect, but unlike my first, I enjoyed that the story was told through both MCs. A great enemies to lovers, forced proximity, fated love etc, that resonated to me. There were some small twists that I could see coming, but also a few that I didn’t quite see until the characters were also seeing. Personally, I am more interested in the story than the spice, but with that said, it was well seasoned! I am kind of new to the spice world so I can’t say for sure how this would rate, but it definitely had some heat. I am very glad I happened across this author, and I do plan on also reading the next book….if nothing else, just to see for myself the “transformation” of the characters I’ve grown to love!
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Reviewed in the United States on May 23, 2024
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Havinne Akins
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 5
😍😍 BEST DEBUT NOVEL EVER
Format: Paperback
I’m having trouble finding accurate words to describe the way this book made me feel, but I am going to do my best. To start off with basic elements, the character and world building are phenomenal. I feel a strong bond to not only the two main characters, Ara and Rogue, but to each and every character introduced throughout the book. The author did a stellar job of giving each of them unique personhood. All of the scenes are beautifully described. So much so that throughout the entirety of the book, I could see every scene: the towns, the castles, the meadows, the landscape. I have had difficulty with this and with distinguishing between outlying characters while reading in the past, but I did not have to think to remember details of world or character building because they flowed naturally within the story and were described well. I have read book series before that made me want to be a part of that world, but I actually felt like I got to step into Auryna and Ravaryn! The plot twists!! Although this is not a suspense novel, it still had me on a rollercoaster of emotions and on the edge of my seat from beginning to end. I haven’t cried actual tears over a book since I was in high school (and I’ve read a LOT). This book finally broke the floodgates in the final few chapters. Multiple times. And we love a good cliffhanger. It truly made me FEEL. THE SPICE is a solid 3.5/5. Some of the scenes had me flushed, some had me taking notes, some just had my jaw slack and my mouth hanging open. Bravo, JD Linton, bravo. The relationships: friendships, family, romantic, ALL of the relationships in this book have so much meaning. The author does a great job at making you feel the love, the anger, the peace, the frustrations, the safety, the familiarity, etc. between the characters. Ara and Rogue. I can not say enough and I also do not want to say too much. Just know that I feel like I know them both, to their core. I know what their childhood looks likes, their darkest moments, their biggest fears, their dreams and passions, what they want in life… The POV switches were seamless. I am so happy this author decided to let us see from both sets of eyes. I can not wait for book two after that cliffhanger. And there is SO much potential for at least one prequel, I can’t wait to see where this author goes! I hope this series continues and flourishes. Fingers crossed!
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Reviewed in the United States on December 5, 2022
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Tracy and Christina
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 5
Amazing!
Format: Kindle, Format: Kindle
This book was phenomenal, I devoured it within a few days! For this being a debut novel, it is fantastic and I would’ve thought the author was a seasoned author. I have zero complaints about this book. Let me start by saying that the world building was phenomenal. I could picture everything in my head because of how detailed it was — that’s how good it was written. And I absolutely love the “captive/captor” trope so much, it’s become one of my favorite tropes, so I was pleasantly surprised to see that this book had that. I loved the banter between Rogue and Ara — they’re both snarky and witty, plus with the romantic tension, it made the dialogue that much better. Speaking of romantic tension, yes there is spice but not so much of it that it overrides the plot, which I loved. For me, this would probably be on the 3/5 level of spice. This book had a ton of plot twists and I thoroughly enjoyed it.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 13, 2024

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