Gentleman Takes a Chance

by Sarah A. Hoyt

Shape Shifter (2)

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Shapeshift into Adventure! Shapeshifters Kyrie and Tom try to live a normal life in a small Colorado town-normal, that is, considering one of them is secretly a panther and the other a dragon. But now a primeval Shifter feud grows infinitely more deadly, and Kyrie and Tom find themselves warriors in an ancient struggle for Shifter destiny itself! Quick-witted fantasy doyenne Sarah Hoyt continues the brilliant contemporary fantasy Shifter saga begun in Draw One in the Dark.

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4 reviews
Fun book. I'm very glad I waited to read it until I'd read Draw One in the Dark, though - I'd have been completely bewildered most of the time, I think. There's a lot of relationships established or thoroughly explained in Dark that shake out in some new directions in Gentleman. That said - the mystery here is pretty poor, both of them. The murder-by-shark is given away way too early, and then the characters plod along to finally reach some conclusion... Dante Dire is just weird. An ancient society of shifters, and the best enforcement of their laws they can come up with is a psychopathic killer and some random rules? Eww. And while the solution to him is slowly unfolded through multiple encounters, it seems to me that some of the key show more encounters are not shared - that is, one person discovers a way to deflect him and in the next encounter another person, who we are not shown being told or otherwise learning the new method, uses it. As a mystery, or a horror, it's average at best. As a relationship novel, where people learn more about themselves and each other and their world (including the aforementioned ancient society of shifters - or maybe that should be ancient societies), it's great. I enjoyed it a lot; unfortunately, as far as I can see, there isn't a sequel. show less
I swear, this is the third book by this author where a character does something incredibly stupid, with foreshadowing, with cramming down the neck of the dumb. The author writes really well when they're not troping - especially the character-is-dumb trope - but sweet gods.

The story itself keeps me grinding away at it, but this book in particular has made me want to rip my brain out a couple times just so I won't have to remember *that* bit.

There's more than one *that* bit.
The newly re-christened George is open for business. Tom and Kyrie are exploring their relationship/living arrangement, and everything's going swimmingly, right? Sure. Until winter descends, the local aquarium begins having a small problem with dead bodies in their shark tank, and a centuries old bounty hunter targets the George's new owners.

An excellent sequel to Draw One in the Dark, which you'll probably want to read first so that this installment makes more sense.

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Picture of author.
113+ Works 2,691 Members

Some Editions

Kidd, Thomas (Cover artist)

Series

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Gentleman Takes a Chance
People/Characters
Thomas Edward Ormson; Kyrie Smith; Rafiel Trall

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Fantasy
DDC/MDS
813.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English2000-
LCC
PS3608 .O96 .G46Language and LiteratureAmerican literature
BISAC

Statistics

Members
108
Popularity
299,411
Reviews
4
Rating
½ (3.65)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
4
ASINs
2