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Dangerous Desires

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Too Wild to Wed by Jayne Anne Krentz
Montana Man by Barbara Delinsky
Falling Angel by Anne Stuart

499 pages, Paperback

First published October 1, 1999

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About the author

Jayne Ann Krentz

403 books7,231 followers
The author of over 50 consecutive New York Times bestsellers, JAYNE ANN KRENTZ writes romantic-suspense in three different worlds: Contemporary (as Jayne Ann Krentz), historical (as Amanda Quick) and futuristic (as Jayne Castle). There are over 30 million copies of her books in print.

She earned a B.A. in History from the University of California at Santa Cruz and went on to obtain a Masters degree in Library Science from San Jose State University in California. Before she began writing full time she worked as a librarian in both academic and corporate libraries.


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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
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2,410 reviews51 followers
March 26, 2024
Although I keep and re-read this book mainly for Jayne Ann Krentz's Too Wild to Wed? (1991), I enjoy the other two books (Montana Man by Barbara Delinsky and Falling Angel by Anne Stuart) just as much, invariably re-reading them at the same time.

Too Wild to Wed: Letty Conroy is sweetly naive about life in the fast track and no match at all for Xavier Augustine, her on-again, off-again fiancé. What struck me most was her outrage at not only being investigated by Xavier prior to their marriage but that the report was only one page long! It made me realize that most of us are in the same boat and what does that say about us? One page to sum up an entire lifetime? It would make the sanest of us want to kick up our heels and do something outrageous. Just as soon as we can think of something outrageous to do. A very believable plot, ingenious in its subtlety and really funny in places. I more than once found myself leaning back and shaking my head as Xavier digs a hole in his relationship with Letty that he will have trouble pulling himself out of.

Montana Man: An enticing story about two people meeting during a storm and having to depend on each other to survive. Both have reason to distrust and dislike the opposite sex, so the interaction between the two is a conflict from the beginning. Add in a 5-week-old baby and you have the makings of a great story. Many of the observations made by the two ring true, and I was especially struck by Lily's attempt to evaluate her actions and conversation ahead of time to be sure Quist won't see them as manipulative, one of his accusations against women in general.

Falling Angel: Although I don't normally like a book theme that is unrealistic, I have really enjoyed this one, over and over. Emerson is stuck in a Way Station and they can't decide whether to send him to heaven or hell, so he is offered a do-over to see if he can go back and fix things he did wrong before he died. The catch is that he cannot tell anyone who he is and he doesn't get to go back in his body, but in Gabriel Falconi's, but he gets to call on three miracles. The story is thought-provoking as Emerson/Gabriel works his way into the lives of strangers and tries to determine how his actions affected them and what to do to correct the results, since he is still essentially the selfish, cold Emerson inside the warm, caring Gabriel. The reader also has to determine whether Emerson is doing the right or wrong thing as he clumsily tries to figure it out himself. I love the way Ms. Stuart has Emerson able to draw on Gabriel's talents when Emerson isn't concentrating on them, like wood-carving, understanding how cars work, ability to cook and repair things, etc., none of which Emerson has any experience with. This book is interesting on many levels.
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