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Kiss of the Night (Dark-Hunter, Book 5)

Kiss of the Night (Dark-Hunter, Book 5)
Author: Sherrilyn Kenyon
Publisher: St. Martin's Paperbacks
Category: Book

List Price: $7.99
Buy Used: $3.85
You Save: $4.14 (52%)



New (33) Used (30) Collectible (1) from $3.85

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 93 reviews
Sales Rank: 3886

Media: Mass Market Paperback
Pages: 384
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 6.8 x 4.2 x 0.8

ISBN: 0312992416
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN: 9780312992415
ASIN: 0312992416

Publication Date: April 19, 2004
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: With pride from Motor City. All books guaranteed. Best Service, best prices.

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Kiss of the Night (Dark Hunter Series)
  • Kindle Edition - Kiss of the Night (Dark-Hunter, Book 5)
  • Hardcover - Kiss of the Night (Dark-Hunter, Book 5)
  • Paperback - Kiss of the Night

Similar Items:

  • Night Play (Dark-Hunter, Book 6)
  • Seize the Night (Dark-Hunter, Book 7)
  • Dance with the Devil (Dark-Hunter, Book 4)
  • Sins of the Night (Dark-Hunter, Book 8)
  • Fantasy Lover (Dark-Hunter, Book 1)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Wulf is an ancient Viking warrior with a useful but extremely aggravating power-amnesia. No one who meets him in person can remember him 5 minutes later. It makes it easy to have one-night stands, but hard to have a meaningful relationship, and without true love he can never regain his soul. When he finally meets Cassandra, the one woman who can remember him, she turns out to be the princess of the cursed race he's sworn to hunt-and forbidden to him. The two of them must face ancient curses, prophecies, and the direct meddling of the Greek gods to find true happiness at last.



Customer Reviews:   Read 88 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars My favorite Dark-Hunter Book!   December 26, 2008
A. Routhier (CT USA)
Although I liked the series from the start, after the fourth book I felt like the story line of the dark hunters was getting a little too repetitive but Wulf and Cassandra's story completely revitalized the series. It gives more history of the Apollites and that angle made the story much more interesting. It didn't focus as much on the heroes tortured past, which I liked because as interesting as the tortured hero is as a character, it can be depressing. If you are on the fence with the series I highly recommend giving this book a chance!!


4 out of 5 stars could do without the martyrs   November 22, 2008
D. K. Stokes
This is the 5th book in the Dark-Hunter series.

Boy, does Kenyon ever believe in torturing her heroes! And she's very inventive at it, too. Dark-Hunter Wulf Tyrggvason has an unusual problem--nobody who's not of his blood, or a Dark-Hunter or Daimon can remember him 5 minutes after they leave him. And there's only one of his descendants left: Chris, who works as his squire.

There's some wonderful stuff there between Wulf and Chris. Wulf is seriously overprotective, because if something happens to Chris, there'll be nobody who remembers him--Dark-Hunters can't be together because they drain each others' powers, and Daimons are the enemy. He's also constantly nagging Chris to procreate--a problem when the college-age young man drives a Hummer and has bodyguards, making prospective dates think he's a drug dealer.

Then Wulf saves a young woman, coincidentally a classmate of Chris's, from some Daimons, and she can remember him. Turns out Cassandra is an Apollite. Not only that, but she's a 26-year-old Apollite. (Apollites die on their 27th birthdays unless they steal a human's soul by drinking their blood and becoming a Daimon.) And she's also the last direct descendant of Apollo himself. As such, if she dies without procreating, so does the sun, destroying the world.

There's also some wonderful stuff between Cassandra and her father, who had to watch his wife and older daughter die and knows Cassandra is next. There's very much a family theme going on here, especially when Cassandra gets pregnant and has to face knowing she'll die not long after the baby's born.

And the Apollites... well, that's just hideous. We've known about them from the beginning of the series, but, as with Wulf and the other Dark-Hunters, we just didn't think about them very much until they became Daimons, in which case, they were evil and had to be killed. The concept of dooming an entire race to being forced to make a choice between becoming an evil killer or dying an agonizing death at such a young age... all because of some quarrel between gods... made me seriously angry. I'm avoiding a rant about people with power destroying regular people's lives without a second thought, but only just.

It's a decent story, heart-wrenching as I'm learning this series tends to be, but I'm thinking maybe there's just a little too much going on in this one. All the explanations about the history got very confusing, and I'm not sure whether it's because it wasn't written very clearly or if it's that there was just so much of it.

And then there was the back-and-forth between Wulf and Cassandra. I always hate that in romances. They argue, seemingly come to an agreement, then in the next chapter they're having the identical argument. Her pregnancy solves the problems of both of them needing heirs, but I was angry that she refused all suggestions of ways she could live. On the one hand, I could understand needing to feel at peace with imminent death, but to me it felt more like we had to veto all these suggestions so the magical solution at the end would be necesary.

The self-sacrifice theme irritated me a lot, too, as it always does. I think it's because I am not one for self-sacrifice, and this whole town full of noble people who willingly spend 24 hours in agony rather than taking a quick slit of the wrists or something because they think it's what the god wants... just makes me want to puke. I have a really hard time believing that it's only a small minority who's angry about this.

Unfortunately, I think this is the last Dark-Hunter book in my TBR pile. It's not making me eager to search out the next ones, especially given the size of my TBR pile and the plethora of great paranormal romances out there.



5 out of 5 stars Kiss of the night   November 8, 2008
Enigma
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

If your a Kenyon fan this book is a must have. Kenyons style of humor, imagery, and the great contrast of things aren't always what they seem creates a wonderful story that you will read over and over.


3 out of 5 stars Sins of the average book   September 12, 2008
Heather Cyr (Phoenix, AZ USA)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Kiss of the Night has been my least favorite Dark-Hunter novel thus far. It left the reader with a lot to be desired. The previous books gave detailed accounts of the Dark-Hunter prior to the change, however it was very vague in this case. Unless I missed it, an explanation was not given as to how Wulf was tricked into trading souls nor what he did in order to become cursed.

I also felt the romance was lacking and rubbed me the wrong way. For some reason, some of the descriptions kind of turned me off. For example one time when Wulf 'passionately' kisses Cassandra, he is left with the taste of lemon. He comments on it to Cassandra who replied that she remembered she had lemon on her fish for dinner. I was saying to myself, "Ew, who wants to kiss someone with fish breath?" Granted, some people may not care, but I like sexy and pleasant smells, not the others. I know I would want to kiss my husband if he hadn't brushed his teeth after eating something the pugnant.

I will say that I so enjoy the background information that is given about daimons and the Apollytes. The back ground information alone is why I rated it a 3 out of 5.

:::Possible Spoilers:::
Questions I had
1) Who and what was/is Kat? They never explained whom she was really
working for.
2) What becomes of Wulf's soul? Is he still soulless since it belongs to Loki?
3) What does Cassandra become? Is she immortal?
4) If both parents are immortal, then what are the children?

I hope as I read further into the series some questions are answered.



5 out of 5 stars Impossible to put down   August 25, 2008
nanalady57 (Lake Mary, FL United States)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

Once again, Sherilynn Kenyon grabs your interest from page 1 and holds on to it all the way to the final page and then you just want more! Each new Dark Hunter captures your heart and you know that you've made a friend for eternity. I'll re-read this many times.

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