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Bengal's Heart (Breeds, Bk 19)
Bengal's Heart - Breeds, Bk 19
Author: Lora Leigh
Reporter Cassa Hawkins has always supported Breed rights believing they should be allowed to live free of fear and prejudice among the humans. A reasonable woman couldn't think otherwise, especially not in the presence of Cabal St Laurents, a spectacularly muscled Bengal. The epitome of the male animal, his sensual growl can fire up Cassa...  more »
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PBS Market Price: $8.09 or $4.19+1 credit
ISBN-13: 9780425229026
ISBN-10: 0425229025
Publication Date: 8/4/2009
Pages: 342
Rating:
  • Currently 4/5 Stars.
 293

4 stars, based on 293 ratings
Publisher: Berkley
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

dbaltezor avatar reviewed Bengal's Heart (Breeds, Bk 19) on + 29 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 13
I'm still not quite sure how I feel about this book. It was good, don't get me wrong. I just felt that there was so MUCH angst between Cabal and Cassa that it tended to overshadow everything else. At the end of Tanner's Scheme you really felt kind-of sorry for Cabal. How alone he was, and the guilt at the loss of Jolie. But in this book you find that his being lonely/alone is all his own fault. He has known who his mate is for eleven years. He has just refused to claim her. Not couldn't, wouldn't. I never truly felt his reasons for not claiming his mate became clear enough to sympathize with. At lease with Cassa, you could understand that her guilt over her then huband's betrayal of the breeds would keep her away from him. She truly believes that he blames her for the loss of his family/pride. There were a couple of places in the book where I felt that he was a bit cruel to her. Not in a punish her for the past sort of way, but anyone with half a brain and the past Cassa has with the dead husband would know she would most likely feel guilt. There is one coversation where Cabal tells her the reason why she is investigating this series of murders is that she is trying to make up for what her husband did. "You need to absolve yourself. That's the reason you've done this all these years. It's the reason why you've always fought to see the Breeds as heroes and victims rather than the killers we were created to be. It's why you put yourself in danger time and again for the Breeds. You can't make up for what Watts did." A few seconds later in that conversation, after she says that has nothing to do with this, he tells her: "It has everything to do with this, Cassa. You think putting yourself in the line of fire will make anyone else see you differently?" Now given the past revealed at the beginning of the book about Cassa, these comments strike of a truly DENSE man or one deliberately trying to hurt her emotionally. It's no surprise that she takes these comments to mean that the breeds blame her for her dead husband's perfidy in betraying the breeds, for not realizing what he was up to, and that they will always hold her responsible and nothing she does can change that. I just found him to not be as honest and forthright as most of the breeds, and that bothered me a bit. Also, in this book we find out that since his escape from the lab, he has know who his mate was. Known that Cassa was his mate, and still slept around like an alley cat. Lora Leigh has insinuated with this book that even though he knew from the beginning, and she knew fairly quickly later, by staying away from each other they managed to avoid the "mating heat" kicking in. She does a very good job of showing Cassa's struggle to deal with the guilt and feelings of responsibility, but I just don't feel for Cabal in this story like I wanted to given the information about him in the other books. He does finally admit that he was running from her because he was scared, but it just felt like a "too little too late" type of thing. I still have to say my favorite breed stories so far are Mercury's War, and Elizabeth and Cassie's story with Dash.
reviewed Bengal's Heart (Breeds, Bk 19) on + 25 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4
Honestly not that bad, as far as the whole story, but her facts are skewed badly in this one. In Tanner's story they claimed to have found Cabel actually in the pit and the only one to have survived. But in Bengal, which is actually Cabel's story, they find him in the control room standing over a woman who had been trying to rescue the breeds from his lab but who was actually in turn betrayed by her own husband and Cabel 'blames' her for the loss of his packmates due to her husband's crime.

Also in this one she contradicts herself by claiming that Cabel never enters her home but in the next paragraph claims that he comes and goes in her home as he wants.

Lastly, is the second introduction of the 'Deadly Dozen'. Why is this a second intro? Because in Elizabeth's Wolf, Dash's command unit was known as the Deadly Dozen, and even though Dash is a Wolf, he joined with the felines since they at that time had little or no knowledge of how Wolfe was doing. But in Bengal a new group is introduced as the 'Deadly Dozen' - and this time it is a group of men who hunted free or escaped breeds before Sanctuary was founded.
mamadoodle avatar reviewed Bengal's Heart (Breeds, Bk 19) on + 1105 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
I liked it but didn't love it.
after9pmreader avatar reviewed Bengal's Heart (Breeds, Bk 19) on + 59 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
this is my second book i have read by this writer. She is a very adult romance writer and it is not for the faint at heart. I love the romance scenes. I find myself skimming the rest of the story in the beginning because you just can't get enough of the "needing" period. She needs to make the rest of the story a tad more exciting to really get into the character. It is a good, fast read. But remember I warned you....It is a ADULT ROMANCE...
YodaMom avatar reviewed Bengal's Heart (Breeds, Bk 19) on + 28 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
This is the first book I have read by this author and I know that it is well into the series, although I did not feel lost in any part of the story. It was well written for a romance and had enough action for my Uf loving side. I found it an enjoyable escape book, filled with romance and intrigue. The two main characters were lusty/sexy and a bit unbelievable at times. The fact that she had known for so many years that she was his mate and being a strong reporter did nothing with that ?!?! That was the only mayor flaw for me. I got over it and really enjoyed the book. I want to read more in this series, I need to know more about the Primal....
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mysterychi avatar reviewed Bengal's Heart (Breeds, Bk 19) on + 17 more book reviews
First book in this series that I have read and I could hardly put it down. I plan to read all the books of the breed series soon as possible. It was exciting and held my interest all the way through.
Brenda
reviewed Bengal's Heart (Breeds, Bk 19) on + 12 more book reviews
Can't go wrong with this book. Love the characters.
reviewed Bengal's Heart (Breeds, Bk 19) on + 4 more book reviews
I really enjoyed this book. I enjoyed getting to see Cabal St Laurents character again, and getting to know him. This book was great, a hot alpha male, and a equal alpha female. I was alittle disappionted by the begining of the book, but it came together so well. Only Lora Leigh could put out so many different books on breeds without them bleeding together, and still having such differences in all her books. I recommend Lora Leigh to EVERYONE, even getting a copy of all the books together for my BF for christmas.

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Breeds  19 of 22
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