
Fierce by Nina Levine — Badass MC Romance Review (Smut • Blood • Loyalty)
If you want an MC romance that leans dark + gritty, delivers high sexual tension, and cranks the club/found-family energy way up, Fierce hits the sweet spot. This is Book 2 in the Storm MC series and follows Scott (VP hero) and Harlow (good-hearted with a backbone and zero patience for bullshit).
Verdict: Worth the ride ✅
Rating: ★★★★☆ (4/5)
Vibe: gritty, slow-burn tension, protective “touch-her-and-die” energy
Best for: readers who want club vibes + found family + open-door spice with a long fuse
Not for: readers who hate slow burn or roll their eyes at classic MC romance clichés
📌 Book Info
Book: Fierce
Author: Nina Levine
Series: Storm MC (Book 2)
Genre: MC Romance
POV: Dual 1st Person
Standalone?: Yes (reads like a standalone)
Format Read: eBook
Release Year: [ADD YEAR]
🔥🩸⚙️ Brand Scorecard (Smut • Blood • Loyalty)
| Category | Score | What it means here |
|---|---|---|
| SMUT (Heat) | 4/5 🔥 | Open door—tension does a lot of the heavy lifting (and it works). |
| BLOOD (Danger/Threat) | 4/5 🩸 | Rival club + domestic threat vibes; the danger doesn’t feel neatly “over” when you want it to be. |
| LOYALTY (Club/Found Family) | 5/5 ⚙️ | Full “you’re family now” energy—Harlow gets accepted fast and hard. |
Heat note: Open door, slow build, dirty talk earns its paycheck.
Danger note: Rival club + stalking/following + attempted SA + unstable parent.
Loyalty note: High brotherhood, strong club presence, protective as hell.
The Hook
Scott wasn’t planning on falling for anyone—until Harlow crashes into his life with that good-heart / sharp-spine combo that’s impossible to ignore. She’s dealing with real-world mess and real-world danger, and the club becomes the thing standing between her and the people trying to break her.
Promise of the story: protective VP hero, slow-burn tension, and that addictive “I’ve got you” energy.
Quick Verdict (No-BS)
What hit:
- The slow-burn tension is mean in the best way—built, layered, and paid off.
- Club/found-family vibes come through strong (Scott as VP actually feels like VP).
- Protective “touch her and die” energy without turning Scott into a cardboard caveman.
What pissed me off / fell flat:
- If you’re allergic to genre clichés, you’ll clock them. This one doesn’t reinvent the wheel.
- The acceptance can feel fast—Harlow’s pulled into the fold quick (personally? I liked it, but it’s noticeable).
- If you need big emotional grovel moments… yeah, you’re not getting those.
Overall: This is a quick, gritty binge with high tension, solid danger, and a club that actually feels present. Not perfect. Absolutely satisfying.
Tropes & Vibes
Tropes:
- Protective / touch-her-and-die ✅
- Single parent / kid in story ✅
- Forced proximity (a little) ✅
- Grumpy/sunshine ✅
- VP hero ✅
- Second chance (for Harlow) ✅
- Slow burn ✅
- Possessive/jealous ✅
- Revenge plot ✅
- “Mine.” energy ✅
Vibe check: dark + gritty, protective, tense-as-hell.
Spice Breakdown (Blunt Edition)
Spice style: More tension than action—and that payoff is exactly why it works.
Chemistry: 5/5 🔥
Best spice moment (no spoilers): When Scott’s control slips and you feel the shift from “keeping distance” to “mine.”
Reality check: The sex doesn’t replace the relationship—it supports it. The tension builds the trust, the trust makes the spice hit harder, and the dirty talk does a lot of the heavy lifting (respectfully).
Romance & Relationship
Why they work: Classic opposites attract with a satisfying push/pull—Scott’s controlled, Harlow’s stubborn, and they meet in the middle where it counts.
Why they don’t (sometimes): They both default to “handle it alone,” and that slows the emotional intimacy (which is kind of the point of the slow burn).
Emotional gut-punch level: 3/5
Grovel/accountability: No. It’s more action + protection than big apology speeches.
The MC World (Grit Check)
Club authenticity: 4/5
Club presence: Strong (more involvement than the previous book)
Brotherhood/found family: Shows up and feels real
Rules & politics: Present enough to matter, not just decoration
Action level: Medium (a few fights + threat running underneath)
Pacing & Writing Style
Pacing: steady (easy binge)
Writing style: clean, fast, “one more chapter” energy
Editing: fairly clean
Content Notes (Reader Respect)
Violence: Medium
Sexual violence on-page: Yes (attempted sexual assault)
Stalking/following: Yes
Domestic abuse: Yes (themes)
Substance use: Yes (drug-addicted parent themes)
Child endangerment: Yes (themes)
Content notes: This book includes violence, attempted sexual assault, stalking/following, and child endangerment themes. Protect your peace accordingly.
Who Should Read / Who Should Skip
Read if you want:
- Opposites attract + protective VP hero
- A quick read with high sexual tension
- Strong found-family / club acceptance vibes
Skip if you hate:
- Slow burn
- MC romance clichés
- Danger threads that linger instead of wrapping up neatly
Final Rating
Rating: ★★★★☆ (4/5)
Final word: Definitely worth the ride—more club involvement, solid grit, and it delivers what an MC romance should. If you like your tension slow, your hero protective, and your found family ride-or-die, this one’s going to hit.
🔥 Reader Question (Engagement CTA)
Do you prefer a slow burn that earns the payoff, or do you want them ripping clothes off by chapter three? Tell me in the comments—respectfully rude is encouraged.
Read it here
- Amazon/Kindle: [ADD LINK]
- Goodreads: [ADD LINK]
- Author site: [ADD LINK]
Disclosure (optional): This post may contain affiliate links. If you buy through them, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
WordPress SEO setup (Yoast / RankMath)
SEO title: Fierce by Nina Levine Review (Storm MC #2) | Gritty MC Romance + Slow-Burn Heat
Slug: fierce-nina-levine-review
Meta description: Fierce by Nina Levine (Storm MC #2) is a gritty, dark MC romance with slow-burn tension, open-door spice, and strong found-family club vibes.
Focus keyphrase: Fierce Nina Levine review
Tags: Storm MC, Nina Levine, motorcycle club romance, MC romance review, slow burn romance, spicy romance
Category: Book Reviews → MC Romance

Leave a Reply