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The Bruise-Black Sky by John Wiltshire
The Bruise-Black Sky by John  Wiltshire













Nik loves Ben with everything he has, and I think like every other book so far he shows it. Nik and Ben in AMERICA! It was funny from their view point. Could Nik do anything ever so awful that Ben would leave him? It’s a couple things in this book, that’s awful, but I find myself always forgiving Nik. I mean, some indifferences had my heart beating wondering, if this was it. This book, they were not playing around with each other. As usual they have their couple spats, and one does this wrong, and the other go pouts. I felt like it was something off with him. Ben who has his memories back is back to being Ben kind of. As usual something drastic happens for Nik to go back to Aleskey Special Forces Nik! Ha, I said it. This picks up a year or two later from the last book. HAH, I have this warm gooey feeling about him doing well. In my hopeless mind I was picturing Nik with a son. Nik who obviously doesn’t think he is good with kids is sadly mistaken. I thought this was one of the funniest books out the series. Talk about secrets! Wow! Everyone is keeping a secret in this book. As if Nikolas would stay at home in disgrace while Ben Rider-Mikkelsen becomes the target of a crazed stalker It’s fortunate for Ben, therefore, that dissonance is a state of unrest, a longing for completion. But on receiving a death threat, Ben suspects the truth of actor Oliver Whitestone’s suicide. Eleven thousand miles from Nikolas, in New Zealand, it’s bitter winter as Ben films the tragic story of a post-apocalyptic gladiator, a victim of his own personal darkness. A deep rift, a terrible lie, separates them. Ben usually overlooks Nikolas’s occasionally jarring dissonance.















The Bruise-Black Sky by John  Wiltshire