Updating book review to add audio review. I waver between 3 and 4 stars. Abby Craden's narration is quite good for Angie, but her voice for the hero (Dare) is a bit too gravely, strained, and rough (she does this on purpose because he had a throat injury). As for how the audio story flows, the first 8 chapters are slow, with too much time devoted to Angie's thoughts, and few scenes with Dare. The action on the stormy ice-cold mountain with a man-eating bear and a ruthless killer begins at chapter 9. Even so, it's sometimes slow, with boring sections describing Angie's thoughts, about how to escape and survive. I liked reading those scenes, but on audio, the pace felt too slow. However, the pace picked up when Dare finally entered the picture for good, at the end of chapter 10.
So... 3 stars for audio version, but 3.75 for text.
Review of the text only:
Horrifyingly gruesome at times, this is an absorbing, suspenseful, and detailed survival story with strong themes of tenacity, trust, and passionate unyielding commitment. Dare and Angie get my vote for most likely to succeed at ... anything and everything!
I liked this book better the second time around (but this time I totally skipped over the really gory scenes and the 5 pages with the bear's point of view -- what was LH thinking!?).
The first time I read it, the horror and survival aspects overwhelmed the romance and relationship, so I rated it 3 stars. However, on this second read, I concentrated on Dare and Angie, and felt like I really got to know the characters -- and more importantly, they began to bond with each other. A trusting, devoted relationship developed nicely, even though the entire book -- except for the epilogue -- takes place in about 48 hours.
Ummm, well, actually...Dare has had his eye on Angie for the past two years. In fact, he's "had his eyes on her world-class ass" since the first time they met. But she wanted nothing to do with the guy who was "stealing customers" from under her nose. As you might guess, the course of true love (yada yada yada).
Now, two years later, Dare goes up the mountain to keep covert watch over his hostile love, who is leading a hunting expedition with two men. Good thing, too.
I'll probably never forget that scene in the dark, when Dare is desperately trying to find Angie, who is cowering in the icy rain, ankle on fire, body layered in mud, hiding from monsters with two feet and four.
All his protective instinct kick into high gear.
Dare -- former army -- is alpha all the way, so he rescues her, but Angie does her part, too -- she's not a quitter and stubborn to the core, despite suffering pain, fatigue, shock, and borderline hypothermia. Beating the odds is soooo not easy for these guys! Lots of intense survivalist stuff goes on for many pages, but I liked that. So many of these modern romantic suspense books make the big rescue look like a piece of cake. (or not...Angie's worst nightmare features a piece of wedding cake, so maybe not the best metaphor).
Once the immediate danger is alleviated, they recuperate for a while. In between rest periods, Dare FINALLY gets his girl to look at him, talk to him!! So...lots of lovely relation-shipping (J) is packed into two cloistered days in a cabin, leading to a fabulously passionate love scene. There is also plenty of sexual banter. I chuckled several times.
But...the danger is still there, and they gotta get off that mountain.
In the epilogue, they get married (of course) and celebrate with a "big-ass wedding cake" (you'll see, the white icing is important).
Note: The man-eating bear is really nasty. The stench. Then, we get to hear his POV for about 5 pages or so. Ick.
(Adult content: explicit sex, several truly gruesome deaths, lots of F-bombs and such, minimal profanity.)