![]() ![]() Similarly Dawn would be doing or thinking about something particularly interesting and then out of nowhere she would completely change her line of thought or action. For example one minute Dawn would be arguing with Stavros and the next minute their making love with no explanation of how they made up. Sometimes I had to re-read entire paragraphs over and over again, to surmise whether I was still in the same scene or a completely new one. ![]() The story was never able to flow in a coherent manner because the author kept on switching between scenes and cutting scenes off abruptly without warning. In Dawn's own words, this book was written in a 'very haphazard and non-systematic way'. ![]() But although I was gripped to this story, as I read on, I was deeply disappointed with how the author's writing style progressed. My eyes became almost glued to every page because you never knew what was going to happen at any given moment between them. Reading about the different twists and turns in Dawn and Stavros's relationship was so fascinating. They become each other's drug and can't seem to break free from one another even when their worlds become an entangled mess of destruction where it is uncertain how it will finally end. Even from their first meeting, Dawn and Stavros's relationship is clouded by gambling's chaotic, deceptive and abusive nature. Stavros is charming and dominant but he is also everything that is bad for Dawn. ![]()
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