Thursday, November 6, 2008
SUITE 606
By J.D. Robb, Mary Blayney, Ruth Ryan Langan, Mary Kay McComas
Berkley (2008), 344 pages, $7.99 (paperback)
Of course in this anthology, J.D. Robb steals the show.
Even a short story starring Eve and Roarke is enough to excite fans and “Ritual In Death” is the definite highlight of this book.
So let’s focus on that one.
Eve is accompanying Roarke at a party in a hotel (owned by Roarke, of course) when a bloody, naked man stumbles in.
Instantly, the party changes from social tedium to murder investigation for Eve. And for Roarke, since he delightfully tags along for much of this one.
The murder and mayhem occurred down the hall from the party – in Suite 606.
As an anthology story, it’s short and quick. But the exceedingly talented Nora Roberts (aka J.D. Robb) excels in infusing the story with the typical humor, suspense, wit and passion that is the earmark of this series.
In the other stories, Mary Blayney’s “Love Endures” is a sweet tale about a couple estranged for years by the lies crafted by the heroine’s husband. When he dies, his ghost must linger until the truth – uttered from his lips – reunites Stephen and Summer.
The other two stories aren’t as strong.
Ruth Ryan Langan, usually reliable for writing stories worth reading, gives readers a disturbingly haunting tale this time – with an ending that’s far from satisfying. Mary Kay McComas’ story is cute, but a bit mind-boggling.
But Robb’s story alone makes this worth reading.
And even better – a full-length Robb book is now available now. Look for a review of “Salvation In Death” next week.
Overall rating: 4 of 5 hearts. Robb’s story is a definite 5, Blayney’s a 4, and the other two would be 3s. One thing positive – they’re all quite different. You’ve got a futuristic murder-suspense, a historical with a ghost, a paranormally weird story and a time travel tale.
Hunk appeal: 10. Of course, Roarke is off-the-scale 10-plus-plus. The others are OK. Stephen gets major points for “enduring” and his behind-the-scenes care of Summer for years. Sam is just put in a too-weird-for-words situation. And a wizard for a hero? Almost works.
Steamy scene grade: XXXX. In some, more than others.
Happily-Ever-After: Good. The best thing about the Robb book is knowing a full-length tale awaits. Langan’s ending was not good at all. Blayney’s ending was a bit weird, but good. McComas’ ending was better than OK.
Also this week…..
KISS AND TELL
by Suzanne Brockmann (1996, paperback) 4-plus of 5.
Before Suzanne Brockmann hit it big with her Navy Seal novels, before she became an advocate for a social cause or two in her books, she wrote pure, sweet romances. And she was quite good at it.
“Kiss And Tell” is the first of a trilogy, and is a story that only advocates romance and love.
Leila couldn’t wait to shake the sand from her shoes and leave her small, beach hometown for the big city. She’s home for the holidays, and bummed because boyfriend maybe-soon-to-be-fiancee Elliot, wasn’t able to join her for the New Year’s Eve masquerade party.
But she wasn’t alone at midnight. She shared a shockingly passionate kiss with a man dressed as a Ninja, someone she didn’t recognize during their all-to-brief interlude. When mystery man has to hurry away due to an emergency beeper summons, she’s left wondering, who kissed her?
Marsh is the best friend of Leila’s brother, and the local doctor. And Leila’s lifelong nemesis. He’s always secretly been attracted to Leila, but even he was shocked by the result of that kiss. He can’t way to explore what it means, but is thwarted when he learns Leila didn’t realize it was he she had kissed.
Not knowing what to do, he gets drawn into a ruse of “helping” Leila find the man. And all along, he tries to woo and court her.
And the results are sweet to read.
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