Of course we start out with an unlikable character using crude language and talking about sex in a completely trashy manner, two characteristics that are sure to come in a Nora Roberts book. He’s talking about him and his group all sleeping with the same whore before they leave to go to the mountain. Ew. He’s cheating on his wife and family. How admirable.
We pick up with the main guy and there’s more crude language. The 1st person he meets tells him there’s an older woman that’ll try to get in his pants. How classy.
I liked how he wasn’t good at public speaking and it made him nervous.
It was a run-of-the-mill story that’s been done so many times it had no effect on me at all. Every military or detective or something like that has had a partner killed and they blame themselves and it haunts them and all that, but I wasn’t feeling anything for Nate. She said he fell into a void or depression and darkness and all that and I just couldn’t summon up any energy to care.
When he 1st meets Rose, a waitress or w/e, he thinks she’s so arresting, so serenely beautiful that he blinks.
When he meets Charlene, the older woman, he calls her a bombshell with very impressive breasts.
Charlene places her hand on Nate’s thigh; he removes it but becomes aroused. Wth? That’s the mother of the woman he’s going to get with. Set some freakin’ boundaries for Gods’ sake.
He even thinks Hopp looked hot at the party.
He sees Meg out the window at night and their eyes connect. When he sees her the next day he tries to decide if she’s pretty.
She shouldn’t have been—her eyebrows were too straight, her nose a little crooked, her mouth top-heavy.
That’s what he thinks about Meg, his future love interest, but her mom was man-killer Barbie.
There’s something wrong with this picture.
He’s just attracted to everybody, isn’t he?
Nora Roberts is so obsessed with having there be jealousy and conflict that she doesn’t realize just how perverted and wrong it comes out as. The mother of the woman is not the person to use for that role. I mean, think about it. When they’re married or w/e, how awkward would it be that he thought his mother in law was a bombshell?
I didn’t like that Nate had already been married.
Meg is very direct and doesn’t beat around the bush or mince words, which is a quality that I do not like, especially when they’re talking about sex with a person they just met.
At least Meg didn’t want him if her mom slept with him.
She speaks so crudely she comes off as manly. Being so direct that you go out of your way to use bad language isn’t admirable, it isn’t funny, it’s unnecessary and classless.
He goes to Meg’s house and she just assumes he wants sex, which is very forward and she seems a little full of herself that she thinks she’s so desirable. She tells him which room to go to and when he starts to say he just came there, not for sex, she says she’s going upstairs and getting naked. She also says she looks really good naked. Wth. Conceited much?
She’s acting like a whore, taking in customers at the drop of a hat and directing them to her room.
She was being way too forceful, and I didn’t like her at all. The way she kept calling him cutie like she was an old cougar going after a younger man got on my nerves. It’s absolutely disgusting the way they treat sex. You meet someone for the first time and you’ve got the woman jumping the men and getting down to business and asking for sex when they don’t even know if the guy likes them. They have no shame and it’s deplorable. They’re over-confident to the point of cocky, which is a bad trait. They jump the men and give them no choice and the men just follow along because it’s sex. Then love comes out of nowhere.
Nate deserves better than this classless piece of trash and I hated that he went along with her plan. She’s no different than her mother. I had no desire to see where this was going, and I had to slam it down. I’ve read enough of her books to see where it’s going.
They don’t take no for an answer. They’re one step above a whore, I guess, since they don’t charge anything for it, but the behavior is the same.
I can only conclude, since Nora Roberts’ characters are always the same, that Nora Roberts is this way. It’s crude, it’s distasteful and it’s majorly unlikable. Her behavior is disgusting. There’s nothing mildly sweet or romantic about it.