3 to 3.5 Stars ~ I enjoyed the 2nd half more than the 1st.
MY RATING GUIDE:
1= dnf/What was that?; 2= Nope, not for me; 3= THIS WAS CUTE/OKAY; 3.5= I ENJOYED IT; 4= I liked it a lot; 5= I Loved it, it was great! (I seldom give 5 Stars).
GIFT OF FIRE, #2 of 2 (following Gift of Gold) is an “Oldie” written by Jayne Anne Krentz (published in 1993). I listened to the audio version narrated by Wendy Petersen. Although GIFT OF FIRE could possibly be read as a standalone title, I recommend (with below comments) reading GIFT OF GOLD first to better understand the dynamics of the main couple and the “paranormal world” element.
Jonas Quarrel, PhD/MMC, mid/late 30’s, is a modern Renaissance man, equally comfortable with either poetry or personal security. As a gifted scholar Jonas has both a reputation and experience in accurately authenticating antiques and museum artifacts, particularly of the Renaissance period, his specialty. Jonas has written articles and travelled extensively only recently moving to the small town of Sequence Springs, CA where he has been living with his lover, Verity Ames and assisting her as dishwasher, handyman, and wait staff. In addition, Jonas shares with no one, but Verity, his unusual and powerful Psychometry talent (or curse) for certain items with violent pasts.
Verity Ames/FMC, 28yrs, is the small business owner of a gourmet Vegetarian cafe in a small town in northern CA. She was raised, schooled and travelled with her father, a rambling sort of man who taught her to be independent and strong-minded. Jonas arrived in Sequence Springs several months ago (book #1) looking for Verity, whom he had met previously through her father. Since his arrival, both a personal relationship and a psychic bond has developed between Jonas and Verity resulting in the unexpected benefit of stabilizing Jonas’ volatile Psychometry talent. Other elements of their uncertain relationship are not as clear.
When Jonas is offered a consulting job to ascertain the age of a supposed ancient estate (said to have been transported from Europe piece-by-piece centuries earlier), Verity encourages Jonas to accept. But unusual and dangerous occurrences begin soon after their arrival on the estate. A treasure is rumored to be hidden somewhere within the estate. Jonas and Verity experience a psychic vision from the past. The dead body of the previous owner is discovered in a closed off hallway. With Murder, Treasure, and psychic elements already involved, what will be next?
What I liked -
1) Jayne Anne Krentz is one of my favorite authors. Usually the dialogue drives the story with quips, humor, a connection between the main characters, a mystery, and a much earned HEA. Generally the angst is low and the characters are mature.
2) Although there are certain elements present in GOF that I don’t enjoy, both GIFT OF GOLD, #1 and GIFT OF FIRE have a paranormal/Time Travel aspect that I do like, similar to many other Jayne Anne Krentz/Jayne Castle novels.
3)I enjoy Jonas. I find his character interesting, although at times he can be a bit heavy-handed.
What I didn’t like -
1) I don’t care much for “managing” or bossy FMCs. Verity is portrayed as such. She also acts immature, IMO, at times. I didn’t much care for Verity in the first half of the book. The action took over the second half so other than a few eye-rolls on my part I was able to zip through to the end.
2) GIFT OF FIRE leans on miscommunication/lack of communication between the main couple to cause conflict, not a device I like. I prefer all conflict in novels to come from outside the couple dynamics, as in Proximity/Danger tropes, with a “us against the world” type mentality.
3) GIFT OF FIRE was written several decades ago. At that time, men were often portrayed as alpha types and “strong” women sometimes as “harpies, “shrews,” or/and conflicted in their goals. The 2 MCs fit this limited pattern. For whatever reason, I can handle Jonas’ attitude (but not name-calling) better than Verity’s.
4) I have actually read GIFT OF FIRE previously and (mostly) enjoyed it. Sometimes the narration of a book lessens the enjoyment of the novel. I felt that was the case with GOF. I felt the MMC voice was monotone in the first 1/2, with very little emotion or inflection. This made Jonas sound bored or uninterested, when actually he is supposed to be a passionate character. Also, the narration seemed rushed (especially in the beginning), again without much inflection in tone, almost putting me to sleep. (The second half wasn’t as bad, IMO).
5) I purchased the audio version of GIFT OF FIRE through a $5 Deal. I would not want to spend more.
Overall, I still enjoyed GIFT OF FIRE - due to the paranormal elements and the unique (para) relationship between Jonas and Verity. I would only recommend GOF to readers, however, who are either great Jayne Anne Krentz fans or are familiar with books from the 1980-1990’s and can deal with the “dated” couple dynamics of that time which (by today’s standards) feels intermittently, either overly alpha and/or immature in nature.
READER CAUTIONS - Not recommended to YA readers or those who prefer Clean fiction.
VIOLENCE - PG
PROFANITY - Yes. Strong language is used fairly frequently.
SEXUAL SITUATIONS - Yes. Open door intimacy scenes. GIFT OF FIRE features MCs continuing from book#1, intimacy begins in GOF early in the book. Some readers might be offended by the tongue-in-cheek references to bondage play.