“She will have my babies, but on our terms.”
Valerie: I thought waking up on a space ship was traumatic. That’s got nothing on returning to consciousness while shackled in a cell. The kicker? I’m supposed to be a breeder for the alien in the cell next to me. My mother always told me I had birthing hips, but I don’t think she meant they were for pushing out blue extra-terrestrials. I want to hate … want to hate my cell-mate, but he’s a prisoner too, and so far he’s taken a few beatings to protect me…
Sax: The food sucks but the view has gotten a hell of a lot better since the human female showed up. I know exactly what our captors want–for us to mate so they can take our baby. Over my dead body. I willing to suffer their abuse if they leave the pretty female alone, but when they hurt her, all bets are off. Now I’m not only finding a way to escape with her, I’m also taking out every last captor before I leave. And then? I’ll fill her with as many babies as she wants.
The Alien’s Escape is a full-length Sci-Fi Romance novel featuring a curvy heroine with nursing skills and a snarky, devoted hero with a pierced tongue who isn’t afraid of a little pain.
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The Alien’s Escape is about as fast-paced as the first one. This time, the book starts off in an Uldani prison cell. Sax, a Drixonian, is still being held captive and taking beatings for not submitting. Valerie is a human, kidnapped from Earth and trapped in a cell with Sax, a large blue alien. The Uldani want to use Sax and Valerie to breed a new generation of Drixonian Warriors who will be subserviant to them. Sax believes Fatas has sent him his purpose in Val; he must get her to safety at all costs.
From the first book, I knew I would like Sax. He’s noble and fun-spirited. A true Drixonian, he treasures women and abides by the traditional customs of respect and loyalty. Valerie came into her own by the end of the book. She started to believe in her own strength and find friendship, love, and a home on this new planet. I can’t wait to continue with this series!
An alien race that’s almost too good to be true
Lord have mercy. Deeply devoted, protective, faithful, loyal, and pierced in all the right places…hell yes, send me to Corin. Their motto “she is all”. Abduct me now.
Sad and Valerie had a rough start in the Uldani prison. But between the two of them can they find escape? Love? This book kept me entertained and I look forward to reading Ward’s book next.
My fave quote:
“Tell me,” he said softly. “What do you feel?” I spoke without thinking first. “Warm. Safe. Protected.” A kind smile spread across his face, not the normal cocky Sax grin. “I feel complete.”
Swoon…..
Okay, I hate captivity books with a passion. The author did this one well. Val although was my kind of woman (in the nursing field and thick/chunky) she was kind of annoying. Yes, I know this are scary but the panicking and screaming and freaking out when the man is trying to do important things like…I don’t know let’s say ESCAPE or other important forms of concentration and she’s busting his subcoc..k sorry lol had to say that word again it gets old. I mean she gave Sax zero breaks. I found that so annoying, I’m like woman shut the hell up and focus on the bigger picture like stay alive. Freak out later. Stop screaming in the mans face. Other than that personality flaw I found her quite tasty lol. There were some mixups in the book that if you weren’t paying attention it would confuse you. The name of the planets were confused and Gar was confused as a Kulk during a fight. Things like that should have been caught during the editing process. Also, Frankie became less of a Queen and Miranda stepped more into the role while in book one the women gravitated towards Frankie for protection and guidance. This time around Frankie was almost childish while Miranda was more mature. I didn’t like that. I still loved the book. It got 4 from me. I look forward to more of the stories. I hope the author maintains Frankie’s backbone. I like that she was a strong character. She made a solid queen. It will disappoint me if she weakens as the books goes on.