reviewed May 11, 2012
What a crappy ending to this series. The potential these books had to be good was amazing. The execution, however, was not. When I hear of such a legacy as this, seven sisters with unique powers who help out others and are supposed to get with one man sounds so interesting in theory, but you get an author like this and it just completely fell apart.
(there are plot spoilers, I just didn’t want to hide the whole review.)
Elle was the wild sister with a temper that I expected so much out of. She does undercover work, and that in itself is cool, but in the very beginning we jump into a case she’s been working on, for some time I’d imagine, and the guy is saying he wants a relationship with her and all that, when she’s under a secret identity. She puts him off, barely, so he just decides to kidnap her on the boat and steal her away to his home.
Now correct me if I’m wrong, but I’ve been led to believe that Elle, the youngest and strongest Drake sister, with all of these powers and special abilities, can handle herself in any situation. Namely, she can handle herself when some guy is trying to bring her to his home. So imagine my surprise when she just stands there and lets it happen.
She could have done what any average, normal person would have done: she could have jumped off the boat and swam her way back. She could have fought her way out, kicking and screaming and using any makeshift weapon she could get her hands on. OR, she could have used the gifts she was born with, you know, all those little tricks and things Elle has used throughout the previous 6 books.
But for some reason that it is just so unfathomable to me, she does nothing. Yes, that’s right, NOTHING. His bodyguard like blocks her way or something that she could have easily gotten out of. But since she let it happen, I felt like she asked for it, so I felt no sympathy for her whatsoever.
She does reach out to Jackson telepathically, and says his name like once…and that’s about it. He keeps up a one-sided dialogue with her, asking where she is and telling her to do whatever she has to just to stay alive, and she doesn’t respond to tell him where she is, who she’s with or to give him any helpful information at all. Stavros knows she’s contacting someone with her mind and shuts it off, and when she gets to the island she can’t use her mind or else she feels pain…which I never really understood how he did that. I felt that his powers were a complete mystery.
We go back to find Jackson really upset and a bit uncontrolled in his anger and devastation at her capture. Which I ate up, because I love to see the man’s reaction when their woman is in danger. And then we pick right back up with Elle and wow, does Christine Feehan just dive right in. I was absolutely shocked to death at what transpired. I did not see that coming. I thought for sure she would be in danger and maybe he’d try something but Jackson and her family would come in time. But we find out that he had been raping her and controlling her unmercifully, forcing her to perform sexual acts with not only him but random men, and she had to ask to use the bathroom and he monitored when she took baths and even went so far as to shave her private parts and whipped her to where she bled, and I was like what in the hell is this doing in a book?
I would never, ever pick up a book where the character was being sexually, physically, and emotionally abused. This is not material for a book in any way, shape or form. Books are supposed to be enjoyable, they’re supposed to take you to another place and make you forget your troubles. They’re not supposed to put you through torture and make you disgusted and repulsed and nauseous like this did.
Which I guess I should have seen something like this coming, she had just had Hannah slashed in the previous one, why not make Elle suffer twice as bad? It was just so sad to know that she had been a virgin before that and was no doubt saving herself for her husband but this man just so brutally used her. It was tragic and unnecessary.
I’m not sure if it was meant to make Elle a stronger person, or show a growth in character or what, but if so, it wasn’t successful. Elle was a shell of a person, letting Jackson cuss at her and borderline bully her and just went along with whatever he had planned. She brings up the past and says that he didn’t like her or her legacy, and I expected her to leave or be hurt or something, but she just couldn’t muster up any emotion. Then when they’re in bed he’s having a flashback of his torture and reaches for a gun, and she sits calmly instead of getting out of the way and he completely barks at her. Instead of being hurt or mad, she goes downstairs and they have sex, and that scene was a little disappointing compared to the romance in her other novels.
When Jackson and them finally save her, I liked the scene where she’s in the boat and her anger is unleashed and causes havoc on the island, and her nose and ears and eyes are bleeding, which was a little disgusting, but Jackson makes her stop so she won’t cause damage to her brain by using her mental powers. Loved that part where he shows he cares and she shows the extent of her gifts.
She came back and I expected her to be hurt and embarrassed and withdrawn from everyone, but she immediately jumps into Jackson’s truck and rides off with him to his home and keeps her distance from her sisters, who could actually help her. She lets Jackson give her a bath, which tells about how close they are and how comfortable with each other they are, but considering what she had gone through I didn’t think she’d want anyone touching her like that. She asks Jackson to cut her hair, and I’m so glad he didn’t go through with it because I hate when girls cut their hair really short and things like that. She did ask for cornrows, which I absolutely hated. Why cornrows for a girl? And her and Jackson proceed to have this insane conversation where he seems to be okay with her having cornrows. Ugh!
Then Elle just goes completely lusty and starts having these thoughts about Jackson that any rape victim in recovery should not be having. She’s thinking about doing things to him that her captor had her do, and I’m wondering if Feehan researched rape victims and the extent of the trauma they suffer through, but I can tell you I highly doubt a victim of this kind wants to do things like that in a matter of days after escaping something like that. Completely unrealistic and sickening. Then we’ve got this scene where Jackson trips over his jeans and I’m just like omg. Omg, I am not reading this right now.
Jackson was cussing and verbally abusing her and I was disappointed that fiery Elle never made a comeback to the woman she was in the earlier books. She might as well had been a completely different person. And I don’t know if it was just me, but Jackson’s “inspirational and motivational” speeches were more bullying and insensitive. The whole “you’re down but you’re not out” speech was overused and I was just not buying it.
Then we’ve got that lovely conversation where Jackson just pops out with “Elle might be pregnant” when Jonas, Ilya and her sisters are there visiting, which was insensitive of Elle’s feelings of such a private subject. Miraculously, Christine Feehan throws poor Elle a bone, having Ilya say he doesn’t think a 7th daughter of a 7th daughter can bear children from anyone other than the one man she’s destined to be with. Thank you, Christine Feehan, for small favors…it was the least you could do after the torture you put Elle through. And I mean that literally, it was the LEAST you could do.
I honestly expected Elle to be pregnant with Stavros’s child and Jackson would just be on board with the whole thing and be very supportive of Elle, in a typical overbearing, almost-abusive way the men in Christine Feehan’s Drake Sisters books treat their women.
The scene where Stavros telepathically takes control of Elle and makes her choke was an intense scene that I liked reading about. Jackson showed his ability to protect her, and Ilya showed his protectiveness of Jolie, and that was nice to read about. However, it was also a bit mysterious, in that Christine Feehan doesn’t fully explain how Jackson got his attack dog to bite Stavros (in the nether regions, I presume?)
The act itself was good and funny, but it loses so much when the author can’t be bothered to explain HOW it happened. Those details are pretty crucial, and I understand it might not make sense because telepathy and powers like that aren’t real and it’s hard to explain something that isn’t real, but an attempt would have been appreciated. The author wasn’t even concerned with letting us grasp how the characters did what they did.
Then we’ve got this fight with Stavros where all of the girls are getting beat up and weak because they go down to the water to fight him off, but only end up getting hurt. You’ve got all the sisters together, yet they’re all unable to do anything. Hmm…are they powerful or aren’t they? I’m getting majorly confused between the authors descriptions of them and the moments when they’re easily drained and unable to defend themselves.
At the end I feel that everything was rushed to the finish line and quickly tied up. All of the others get married who haven’t previously been married, and I didn’t really like that they all upstaged Jackson and Elle’s moment. It was as if they hadn’t planned their momentous and life-changing moment, but said “Oh, what the hell? Why not get married?”
And I didn’t like how Elle was kept in the dark about what really happened to Stavros. Why didn’t they just tell her they had killed him? I think she deserved to know that.
At the end I did like how each couple was mentioned in their private moment.
I’m just so fed up with Christine Feehan’s sabotaging her characters as if she hates them or something. Idk why an author would do that to their own characters. This book was horrifying in its gruesome details. This one did have more a shock-factor and plot than previous ones, but again, there are a lot of “poor me” I-feel-sorry-for-myself emotions, and constant feelings by a character become boring and exhausting to read through.