3 stars
The Suspense
I have to admit I wasn't vowed and amazed by this one. The story is:someone kidnapped Rachel a year ago and then faked her death, so everyone, including her family, thought she was dead. Now, a letter arrives to Rachel's husband Kelly, with pictures of his supposedly dead wife and her coordinates. They get her out, but who did this to her? And why?
I felt the suspense part could have been done better. The premise could be a good one, but it was paid almost no attention at all, so the result felt kind of jumbled and obvious.
The Relationship(s)
If the suspense bit was overlooked, the romance and relationship part wasn't. The renewal of the marriage between Ethan and Kelly is a difficult thing to achieve, made even more so by her memory loss and recent trauma. So, now they have to get over everything that was done to Rachel and also over the past, because it turns out their marriage wasn't so picture-perfect after all. So, even as Ethan looks forward to his wife's complete recovery, he also dreads the arrival of her memories, because that can mean the end of their marriage. About 20 pages before the ending I was very ready to hold their lack of *marriage problems-resolving* against them, but I liked the way it was written at the end. It's not the perfect HEA, they're together and they'll give it another chance. All is not easily resolved or forgiven(as it shouldn't be). It's a beginning, non an ending.
What's also very well developed are the relationships between other people in the book as well. Rachel's and Ethan's with Ethan's family, Rusty's with everyone, everyone's with everyone, lol, etc... I liked the multitude of POVs we had present here. The back stories give all the other characters a depth and a presence I hadn't expected, which would certainly make it easier for me to like the next books, since I already like the Kelly brothers and KGI employees very much.
Ethan
I have conflicted feelings about this one. Ethan used to be a SEAL and a husband and he lost both a year ago. Now, he's recovering just as much as Rachel, finding who he is and trying to save his marriage. Ethan has quite a lot of missteps and bad decisions in his past. He'd been jealous, unreasonable sometimes, selfish...Now, he's trying to make up for it, even though I found his secrecy regarding their past and his constant obsessing over it a bit selfish. You know she'll find out, why not just tell her and discuss it with her? Besides you should be more concerned with her health and well-being than potential issues.
Still, he felt real to me. He has his faults, but he's working on them, and I ended up liking him, despite myself.
Rachel
I had the most problems with Rachel. Maybe because of the plot itself, because all this is happening during her recovery. I understand, she's strong and brave, and wronged and innocent, and fragile(I think that was mentioned many, many times). and I admire her for surviving, BUT I didn't get a feel for her as a person at all. All the time she's remembering things it's all about her relationships with other people, but who is she? What does she do? What are her quirks, her likes and dislikes, totally unrelated to other people? What are her faults?
And that last one was my biggest peeve. She has no faults. She is this perfect, innocent person bad things happen to and that people love. She doesn't get angry, she's not stubborn, doesn't fight, nothing. I felt Rusty was a much more tangible character than her! Even Ethan, with his faults and mistakes, has a personality. She-not so much.
Also, I found it hard to believe that ALL fault for marital problems was on Ethan's side. When something goes wrong both sides are usually, in some way, the cause. Maybe there is one spouse that is guiltier, but not usually to this point. This contrast between perfect/poor innocent Rachel and bad Ethan made it hard for me to accept the whole thing, but especially the Rachel-That-Can-Do-No-Wrong.
General
Despite everything, I liked this book and I couldn't put it down. I got to care for this characters and I'm looking forward to the other books.