Thursday, July 16, 2026

Burn for Me by Ilona Andrews: review

4/5 stars on Goodreads

Burn for Me by Ilona Andrews

Burn for Me starts Hidden Legacy UF series. I picked it at random for a quick summer read having been in a bit of a reading slump, and it worked perfectly for it. It’s ‘old-school’ urban fantasy from over a decade ago when UF still had heroines who weren’t afraid to stand their ground and who didn’t fall on their back when the hero so much as glance at their way. Sex and romance are something that is worked towards, not a page filler.

The book takes place in modern Houston, a location that isn’t exactly overused in fiction. It’s a world with magic that’s been introduced to it less than two centuries ago, but which has since become hereditary, with powerful Houses breeding for best results. Magic has altered the geopolitical situation too, so it’s not US of our world.

Nevada Baylor, 25, is in charge of her family’s PI business, running it with her younger sisters, cousins, mother and grandmother. Her magic allows her to tell when people are lying, something she’s kept tightly hidden so she wouldn’t be used by Houses or government, so much so, that she’s clueless to her own abilities. She’s about to learn.

Thanks to a business decision Nevada’s made around the time her father died, the agency is owned by a large House corporation, and they’re not above pressuring her to take a suicide case. She has to bring in a fugitive magic user who is a Prime level pyrokinetic capable of incinerating her from a distance and psychopathic enough to do it too. Since she knows she can’t apprehend him, her only option is to bait him to come to her. It works a bit too well.

It gains her the attention of one of the most powerful, destructive Primes in existence, Connor “Mad” Rogan who is the head of Rogan house and equally psychopathic to Nevada’s prey. Reluctantly, with equal parts of fear and lust, she agrees to work with him. It’s an explosive case with a high body count that turns out to be more than meets the eye. The case is solved on the surface, but the backstory will continue, as we don’t learn who’s behind everything.

This was a good start to a series. It’s fast-paced and entertaining, with a main couple that’s not so much ‘will they or won’t they’ as it is about ‘when’. There’s enough heat on the page to entice though. Rogan isn’t the typical protective alpha male. He’s cold, callous and selfish, and doesn’t really believe rules apply to him. I’m guessing the romance won’t advance until he’s worked through some of this to become a more decent person. Nevada is the protective one, with issues of her own. And more magic than she thought she did. For all that I chose this for a one-off, I might read the rest of the series too. Had I read this a decade ago when it came out, I wouldve devoured it.

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