Sunday, December 7, 2008

THE PAGAN STONE

By Nora Roberts
Jove (2008), 305 pages, $7.99 (paperback)

Nora Roberts very, very rarely disappoints.

But the finale of her latest otherworldly-type trilogy fizzled somewhat.

Perhaps it was because the bad guy wasn’t really a guy – or gal. Perhaps it was because Gage and Cybil weren’t really romance hero and heroine worthy.

Maybe it was because Gage and Cybil’s “courtship,” if you can call it that, seemed to be more about the physical than romance.

And maybe some readers aren’t just enlightened enough to latch onto characters who are way too casual and “cosmopolitan” about certain things.

Or maybe all the research and speculation about the big evil entity lurking in their lives just got a bit tedious and overshadowed the romance.

Regardless, “The Pagan Stone” wasn’t as good as its predecessors, “Blood Brothers” and “The Hollow.”

Still, a disappointing Nora Roberts book is better than many and it’s still an intriguing story. And besides, if you read the first two books, you’ve got to read this one.

Encouraged by successful battles against the evil thing in the earlier books, the team of six is ready to dispense of the bad entity for good. They’re far from totally confident they can, but they know they have no choice.

Of course we started “The Pagan Stone” with two couples already blissful – Quinn and Cal (“Blood Brothers”) and Fox and Layla (“The Hollow.”) By the way, Layla was less annoying in this book.

Gage and Cybil resent the notion that fate may be forcing them toward couple-dom. They acknowledge a physical attraction, but are determined not to be paired for eternity.

Of course, they end up paired for eternity.

When Gage confesses his love – and it does rather charmingly come out like a confession dragged out by torture – he says, “I’m not here with you because of some grand design dictated before either of us were born. I don’t feel what I feel for you because somebody, or something, decided it would be for the greater good for me to feel it. What’s inside me is mine, Cybil, and it’s in there because of the way you are, the way you sound, the way you smell, you look, you think….

“I’m in love with you, and I’m almost through being annoyed about it.”

And by the time you read that, you’ll almost be through being annoyed at Gage and Cybil and the research that bogged down the story somewhat.

Overall rating: 3 of 5 hearts. While the research and speculation about how they can best defeat the evil entity gets cumbersome, there is still enough witty dialog and repartee to make it worth reading. Nora Roberts is incapable of writing a bad book. This one just isn’t as good as most of hers.

Hunk appeal: 10. Gage is a good enough guy, and while he stumbles a bit – and is somewhat too casual – he does rally nicely at the end.

Steamy scene grade: XXXX. Doesn’t stumble here.

Happily-Ever-After: OK. The evil is destroyed and the town can live without the fear that strikes every seven years. The couples are all paired and headed toward wedded bliss.

Also this week…..

A BRIDE BY CHRISTMAS
by Heather Graham, Jo Beverley and Candace Camp (2008 paperback) 3 of 5.

These are actually stories by these authors written 19 and nine years ago. Even though they’re all short stories, they do drag at times. Still, they’re Christmas stories and that makes them more tolerable. In Graham’s story, “Home For Christmas,” a Yankee captain confiscates a Southern home, and captivates it’s young mistress – Isabelle. She is torn between her feelings for Travis, and her allegiance to the Confederacy. In Beverley’s, “The Wise Virgin,” Joan gets entangled in a feud between her uncle and his long-time enemy, and falls in love with the enemy. She thinks their future together is doomed not to happen, but she underestimates the power of true love. And in “Tumbleweed Christmas,” by Camp, Melinda becomes a housekeeper and cook for a curmudgeonly rancher. By Christmas, he’s not so curmudgeonly any more.

1 comment:

ReneeLouise said...

I am very much being bord reading about all the detailed research in The Pegan Stone. Not to mention that her Tarot card information is not all correct. I have been reading Tarot for 15 years and I have several decks. I have researched tarot. Cybil pins herself like the Queen of swords, claiming that the physical charectoristics is dark, with dark hair and eyes. The Queen of swords is in truth, that of a fair complected woman of light to medium colored hair and light colored eyes. The Queen of swords is the fairest of the lot and is an AIR sign. I dont know why this bothered me.