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Lost Colony #2

Crystal Flame

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Kalena sets out on a quest to destroy her family's most vile enemy.

375 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published November 1, 1986

389 people are currently reading
1122 people want to read

About the author

Jayne Ann Krentz

401 books7,170 followers
The author of over 50 consecutive New York Times bestsellers, JAYNE ANN KRENTZ writes romantic-suspense in three different worlds: Contemporary (as Jayne Ann Krentz), historical (as Amanda Quick) and futuristic (as Jayne Castle). There are over 30 million copies of her books in print.

She earned a B.A. in History from the University of California at Santa Cruz and went on to obtain a Masters degree in Library Science from San Jose State University in California. Before she began writing full time she worked as a librarian in both academic and corporate libraries.


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5 stars
1,324 (40%)
4 stars
1,093 (33%)
3 stars
700 (21%)
2 stars
136 (4%)
1 star
39 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 86 reviews
Profile Image for Maria.
2,376 reviews50 followers
February 10, 2023
I don't know how many times I have read this book, but it remains one I look forward to re-reading. Like Shield's Lady, the plot and genre remain interesting and unusual, the characters are fascinating, and the dialogue seldom disappoints. I am grateful to Ms. Krentz for persevering with this genre, since it is hard to find. It also has a little turnabout in that it is Ridge who is unsure of himself as far as the marriage is concerned and anxious to pin Kalena down while Kalena is only willing to indulge in a temporary marriage and longs for freedom. The concepts of good versus evil and light versus dark are treated well and make the reader think about the importance of balance in anyone's life.
394 reviews39 followers
April 5, 2017
This story had its good and bad points. I liked the alien world with a touch of magic, and the idea of there being ancient keys and stones of power that represented the different ends of the spectrum. However some other aspects of the story were less satisfying.

Profile Image for Jane Stewart.
2,462 reviews964 followers
September 23, 2012
1 ½ stars. Dull and boring. I wanted it to be over.

I should have stopped reading, but I kept going for the purpose of writing a review, and hoping, maybe, something would be good later. It got a little better during the last part, but not enough. The characters didn’t intrigue me. The conversations didn’t interest me. The plot was based on a potentially interesting idea, but it was not developed well. I felt no chemistry between the couple. I wasn’t drawn to Ridge, the hero. I was bored during the first two sex scenes. Other sex scenes happened, but nothing special. Other readers may like this, but it just didn’t work for me.

STORY BRIEF:
Kalena’s parents were killed. Her aunt Olara brainwashed and raised Kalena to assassinate the man responsible, Quintel. Kalena wants certain freedoms and mistakenly believes she will have them after she kills Quintel. To get close to Quintel, Kalena must do a temporary marriage to Ridge who works for Quintel. These temporary marriages are common. The sellers of magic sand will only sell to the “wives” of traders. So Ridge marries her in order to take her on a buying trip. They are not in love. They have sex. They are influenced by traditions which say: Husbands must protect wives and give orders to wives. Wives must serve hot tea to their husbands in bed in the mornings. She likes doing that.

DATA:
Narrative mode: 3rd person. Story length: 344 pages. Swearing language: mild. Sexual language: mild. Number of sex scenes: 7. Setting: a time when people rode animals for transportation and used swords. A place called Zantalia, similar to earth. Copyright: 1986. Genre: medieval fantasy romance.
Profile Image for Anne Patkau.
3,711 reviews68 followers
January 18, 2013
Kalena will be an independent freewoman, after she poisons Quintel, the greedy trade baron who wiped out their noble House of the Ice Harvest. Her aunt contracted a trade marriage with his trusted Fire Whip, orphan Ridge, on a mission for Healer Sand, that burns like incense for diagnostic visions. "In the depths of a Far Seeing trance", Olara sees the assassination succeed during "a large wedding party" p18 (not whose, where or when - so how accurate?). The couple's flirtations entertain me more; stimulating sheet scorching heats up the steamy romance to a boil.

The whole world is at stake. Centuries ago, wise Dawn Lords, "newcomers to this land" p543, hid a Light Key and a Dark Key, separately entombed in white ice and black fire, to prevent a cataclysmic explosion if "ever brought close together" p339. Only Kalena can release the Light Key, only Ridge, the Dark, because his anger can turn Countervail steel red-hot. Through choking black mist traps, kidnaps, the danger builds . An evil mastermind has engineered them together, believing his destiny is ultimate control of the resulting power; his identity seems clear .

I preferred the core buildup to the traditional Harlequin-style elements; the promise of x-rated passion does deliver in full. She's a green-eyed curly red-head; he's older, taller, sterner; both attractive rather than "beautiful" p36. Odd words, expressions, are introduced easily, in context - sarsilk material purchased for wedding cloak, creet birds for riding, eightdays for weeks, shirts monogrammed on left shoulder p237, "by the Stones" p354. However, tenets from the Philosophy of the Spectrum are boring. Although she tires "of having everyone lecture me on the subjects of my responsibilities" p406, she obeys her duties. At least she seems to mature, realizing freedom may be willing whole-hearted choices p501.

Typos:
p77 "sweetness of the drought that was served" is draught
p242 "animal crouched" is reptile
Profile Image for Jessie.
361 reviews3 followers
June 20, 2020
This book was an enjoyable and quick read, taking me a little over a day to finish. I love Jayne Ann Krentz and the romances and adventures she writes about and though this book isn't one of my top favorites, I would still recommend it for fans of this author. There were times where I felt like things were overexplained to the point that I didn't 100% understand (partly, I'll admit, because I zoned out), but got enough to keep up with the plot. Kalena and Ridge's relationship is probably one of the most extreme examples of males being overly dominant and females being considered too willful that I've seen in a Krentz novel and there were plenty of times that I wanted to smack Ridge "Gibb's style" for how he spoke to Kalena as well as about every other male in this book. However, by the end their relationship reached a healthy balance between each of their beliefs and needs. And the way that balance was achieved was phenomenal to read. I do love the psychic elements Krentz slips into most of her novels and the mystery in this one was fun to unravel.
1,146 reviews5 followers
January 28, 2018
This book was published in 1986, so I had prepared myself not to compare this to the awesome books published more recently. Turns out I didn't have to be concerned about that little detail at all. I will be reading the books one and three in the lost colony series. Wonderful strong characters and an awesome story. With a lot of writers, the early works just don't meet the quality of later works. This is not the case with JAK. If you haven't read the lost colony series, you need to.
Profile Image for Rebecca Delio.
1,116 reviews5 followers
October 9, 2019
Excellent Story

I first read this story in book form as Kindle's were not around at that time. I really enjoyed the w at that time and re-read it several times. I am now happy to have this story on my Kindle so I can read it whenever I want......
84 reviews1 follower
July 2, 2020
Got and Cold

This book has fascinating aspects of both. A very good meld of both ends of the spectrum. There is nothing grey about this story. Unconventional but great,totally unusual. Will keep you enthralled.
Profile Image for Debrac2014.
2,335 reviews20 followers
March 1, 2015
Another enjoyable fantasy from Jayne Castle!
245 reviews
July 28, 2018
This novel mixes sci fi fantasy with romance, and it was more entertaining than I expected. I read it many years ago, and am glad I reread it. I wonder if I read the other books in the series.
Profile Image for A.B. Gayle.
Author 20 books192 followers
August 30, 2020
This book had a lot of insightful thoughts into the nature of male/female relationships. Written in the eighties when the author was publishing very different stories for Harlequin, at times it feels like a rebuttal or at least a reflection on all the familiar tropes those books contain.
There was still the arrogant husband declaring he knew best, but this was counterbalanced by the wife fretting for her freedom.
Although the three books are considered to be a series, the only thing they have in common is humans who have settled on a planet not their own. Each book shows a different society with all its rules, customs and attitudes. Perhaps the books served as testing grounds for an author looking for a world to set ongoing stories in.
The book uses the arranged marriage trope so common of romances in that era. This allowed full on sex scenes without breaking the moral code of the day. The nature and means of these pairings varied, but the essence of finding the love and trust to make these “real” marriages is the core of this and the other books in the series.
This one explores the concept of the rights of women.
Trying to manipulate the hero and heroine were a cabal of men who hated and were dismissive of women, and a group of women who were contemptuous of and had no time for men. They represented the ends of a spectrum. “Spectrum” actually being the religion of the region. There was no suggestion that one was better than the other, more that the more extreme one side became, the more extreme the other side had to go to balance it.
There were also some good depictions of the difficulty men have understanding what a woman is thinking and the frustration and often knee jerk anger that results.
No magic cure was given for this, just tolerance and the understanding that communication helps, with the sidenote that these minor skirmishes ensure the relationship is not dull.
The nagging sense of masculine helplessness began to irritate Ridge. He sought to counter it the only way he knew; he got angry again.
I think many men make the mistake of underestimating their women. Or perhaps it’s just a matter of not being able to read their minds.”
And while some readers may not be able to relate to the personalities or partnership, they were true to their fictional selves. At least Ridge understood he was being a jerk at times and regretted it afterwards.
Profile Image for Carrie.
2,036 reviews93 followers
May 2, 2011
SFR Reading Challenge 2011- I'll keep this here even though it might be better termed a fantasy set on another planet.

3.5*

Crystal Flame is a companion book to Sweet Starfire, although both are stand-alone reads. They are set int he same universe, but have no characters or events binding them. Sweet Starfire is an excellent sci-fi romance which I highly recommend. Crystal Flame is more fantasy than romance, and while still enjoyable, was a weaker book overall.

The story starts out strong, with main characters who are well-drawn and interesting. The plot set up well done and the book involves a favorite device of mine, the "road trip" with hero and heroine. The book starts to flounder when the two traveling companions reach their destination, and the real "fantasy" part of the plot comes to the fore. The entire history of the "Keys" was vague, and from there the plot gets vague as well. I still don't quite understand the power of the Keys or how it was channeled or controlled, and why, so what should have been the pivotal scene in the book is just sort of "whatever."


At over 400 pages, Crystal Flame could have used some good editing to remove redundancies and tighten the story to about 350 pages.

All that aside, I still enjoyed the story, especially the main characters, and will definitely read the last story set in this universe, Shield's Lady.
Profile Image for Michele.
239 reviews8 followers
July 17, 2014
I'd actually rate this one around 3.5 stars. I really enjoyed the setting, especially the religion/philosophy of the culture. The romance was pretty good, but a bit heavy-handed still (alpha males, ugh). The two main characters were still likeable, however, and a lot of the awkward relationship stances came from their own inexperience and the culture they were raised in.

It's a good read in terms of understanding Krentz's development as a writer.
Profile Image for Steliana.
9 reviews
December 23, 2017
That is definitely my favourite of the Lost Colony series. And I loved the whole series, far better than the one with ghost hunters. I think the male/female principle yin/yang thing is done marvelously, and the chemistry between the hero and the heroine is just perfect. The fantasy elements are subtle and well-written - no matter what name Jayne Ann Krentz writes under, she will always be one my favourite authors.
Profile Image for Mary Lynne.
738 reviews
January 15, 2022
Yes, it's got old-school values, but this second-ever futuristic romance (Sweet Starfire, the first book in this series, counts as that) is a comfort read for me. Despite some very gendered values that definitely reflect the 1980s, I love the protagonists, their journey is fascinating, and the mystery is one that kept me going till the last page. Sometimes, you just have to love a classic!
Profile Image for donna.
1,545 reviews3 followers
November 17, 2019
I think this is too dated. The whole I am your husband and you must obey me grated on my nerves. There is one sex scene that in my opinion could be considered marital rape. The whole concept a wife wears a collar that has been locked by the husband was unsettling.
341 reviews2 followers
January 30, 2025
### **Recenzie – *Flacăra de cristal* (Colonia pierdută #2) de Jayne Ann Krentz**

**„Flacăra de cristal”**, al doilea volum din seria *Colonia pierdută*, continuă să dezvolte universul SF romantic creat de Jayne Ann Krentz (sub pseudonimul Amanda Quick). Acest roman combină elemente de science-fiction, mister și romance, oferind o poveste captivantă despre pericol, puteri supranaturale și pasiune.

---

### **Povestea**

Acțiunea are loc pe Harmony, o planetă colonizată de oameni, dar abandonată de civilizația avansată care o populase anterior. Aici, supraviețuirea depinde de înțelegerea și controlul energiei psi, un tip de putere pe care unii oameni o pot folosi în moduri unice.

Protagonista, **Alice North**, este o femeie independentă cu un trecut misterios, care încearcă să își țină în frâu abilitățile psihice rare. Când devine ținta unui pericol necunoscut, ajutorul îi vine din partea lui **Drake Sebastian**, un bărbat enigmatic, puternic și extrem de atrăgător, descendent al unei familii influente. Împreună, cei doi trebuie să descopere adevărul despre o relicvă periculoasă – flacăra de cristal – și să navigheze în lumea periculoasă a conspirațiilor și trădărilor.

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### **Tematici**

1. **Puterile paranormale și moștenirea trecutului**
– Autoarea explorează modul în care talentele psi influențează viețile oamenilor și dinamica socială a planetei Harmony.

2. **Romantism și tensiune emoțională**
– Relația dintre Alice și Drake se dezvoltă treptat, combinând atracția fizică cu nevoia reciprocă de încredere.

3. **Conspirații și mistere**
– Descoperirea secretelor civilizației dispărute și a relicvei periculoase menține suspansul pe tot parcursul poveștii.

4. **Lupta pentru supraviețuire**
– Pe Harmony, fiecare pas poate fi periculos, iar personajele trebuie să își folosească inteligența și abilitățile pentru a rămâne în viață.

---

### **Stilul de scriere**

Jayne Ann Krentz scrie într-un stil alert, cu dialoguri inteligente și scene de acțiune bine echilibrate. Elementele SF sunt integrate într-un mod accesibil, fără a deveni copleșitoare pentru cititorii care nu sunt obișnuiți cu acest gen. Romantismul este intens, dar nu copleșește partea de intrigă și mister.

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### **Personajele**

✔ **Alice North** – o eroină puternică, determinată să își controleze abilitățile și să își croiască propriul drum.
✔ **Drake Sebastian** – un erou carismatic, protector și cu un trecut complicat, dar loial și dedicat celor dragi.
✔ **Personajele secundare** – bine conturate și esențiale pentru dinamica poveștii, adăugând umor și suspans.

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### **Puncte Forte**

✔ Lumea fascinantă a planetei Harmony, cu o combinație originală de SF și paranormal.
✔ Un echilibru reușit între mister, acțiune și romantism.
✔ O eroină independentă și un protagonist masculin puternic, dar nu copleșitor.
✔ O poveste captivantă, cu un ritm alert și răsturnări de situație bine plasate.

---

### **Puncte Slabe**

➖ Unele aspecte ale lumii SF ar fi putut fi mai dezvoltate pentru a oferi un context mai profund.
➖ Clișeele romantice sunt prezente, deși nu deranjează fanii genului.

---

### **Concluzie**

**„Flacăra de cristal”** este o combinație reușită de SF, paranormal și romance, perfectă pentru cititorii care adoră poveștile pline de mister, puteri supranaturale și relații intense. Dacă v-a plăcut primul volum din *Colonia pierdută*, cu siguranță acest roman nu vă va dezamăgi.

🔹 **Recomandat pentru:** fanii romanelor romantice cu elemente SF și celor care caută o lectură captivantă, cu personaje carismatice și o lume originală.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Tim Covell.
Author 3 books9 followers
January 11, 2021
I picked this up without noticing the date (1986) or the fantasy setting. Both would have warned me about the content, though not enough to stop me reading it.

I used to read a lot of fantasy, but drifted away as I found too much fantasy was focused on the superficial elements. A pre-industrial society, magic, an ancient curse, and a chosen individual does not make a story fantasy. As Ursula K Leguin told us, in her essay “From Elfland to Poughkeepsie,” many writers don't understand that fantasy is not just a setting, but a highly symbolic form of story-telling. Krentz appears to understand that, but the yin-yang symbolism is heavy-handed at times, and from my modern perspective the setting's rigid social division into a male/female binary is uncomfortably heteronormative. I wanted to know more about the social misfits we meet. The world-building is good, helped by a more subtle approach in most cases, though there are exceptions like the awkward use of the term "eight-days" for the equivalent to our week.

The heroine was strong and relatively independent, especially considering the age of the book. She eventually accepts her role as wife, which in this society is more restrictive than ours, but she is relatively free, as wives go in this society. The setting is integral to the romance plot, a distinction often overlooked in fantasy.

The mix of romance, fantasy, and an action-adventure plot read well, though the resolution of the action-adventure plot is not completely satisfactory (and reminded me of the conclusion of Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone). I enjoyed the story, and wouldn't mind seeing what else happens in this setting, but although the book is part of a series, each in the series has a different setting. And this accidental foray into fantasy was not enough to make me risk further explorations in that genre.
Profile Image for Kelly.
5,667 reviews227 followers
June 23, 2024
This is a new-to-me read of an older JAK series and Ridge did a few things that were maybe a bit problematic when it came to his attitude toward Kalena. To be fair, the divide between the male and female roles on the colony ARE one of the main issues between Kalena and Ridge, so his attitudes were addressed. It's just, you know, there was sometimes a little eww going on.

BUT...Ridge did address them. Sure, two people can't change an entire culture alone, so the larger gender disparities are still around, but Ridge and Kalena found something that worked and I'm good with that.

So. A colony world with high families, blood vendettas, legends that have more than a little truth to them, shadowy cults, and two people who have dreams for themselves that don't look like they quite align. Except they do. It just takes time for both Kalena and Ridge to realize that the things they want aren't worth anything if they don't have the other by their side.

Throw in a road trip of sorts, an all-female enclave that wouldn't mind folding Kalena in with them, and an epic battle between light and dark and there's a lot going on. Enjoyable overall despite my issues with the assigned gender roles.

-Kelly @ Reading the Paranormal
Profile Image for Olga Godim.
Author 12 books85 followers
Read
June 16, 2019
DNF 70%
For some reason, this novel is booked as #2 in the same series as Sweet Starfire. I liked Sweet Starfire very much, but I didn’t like this one at all. In fact, I disliked it so much, I couldn’t even finish it.
First, I have to say: these two novels don’t belong in the same series. Everything is different: the world, the characters, the atmosphere. The only common thread between the two – they’re both romances with paranormal flavor.
The main difference lies in the attitude towards women. In Sweet Starfire , this attitude is close to what I consider right. The man and the woman are more or less equal. In Crystal Flame , on the other hand, the woman is depicted as a stupid chattel, and the man is arrogant beyond belief. “I know what’s best for you,” he keeps saying to the woman he fucks. “Your future is with me.” Eventually, she agrees with him, even though she dreamt of freedom before she met him. It disgusted me so much, I finally stopped reading.
Profile Image for Don ツ .
248 reviews37 followers
August 3, 2020
I read this during the pandemic. Bought it from eco shop at my hometown. I've always wanted to read Jayne Ann Krentz, but never had the time, hence when I found this copy, I was estatic. Don't mind the star. Nevertheless, I still enjoy this book at some part. Consider this 2020 & the date this book was written, I'm still new to this genre. Especially when the characters always mention the "Spectrum" = heaven, I think. Jargon to utopia world where, women -men inequality at large. Where men become traders & control the world. Women serve as wife, healer or taking low-born any traditional part. Not that much different from normal historical rom, only you get new roles, with mystical lore jumps you. Creet: as opposed to horse. Does that animal fly, I wonder. When you start reading, you'll never guess it's about The Light key & Dark key. I just thought that was new plot, for more kick and essences to the romance nothing. I'd like to talk more onto the side characters especially the aunt. But let's leave that on next time.😝
Profile Image for Spinneretta.
2,854 reviews20 followers
January 12, 2022
Kalena is the last remaining heir to a Great House, one who has been raised to believe that she has to assassinate the man responsible for the deaths of her father and brother.
Contracted in a trade marriage to Fire Whip Ridge, the two set off to find out why the trade routes have been disrupted. Along the way they learn a lot about each other, and discover that there might just be more danger than they were expecting…

Although called the second Lost Colony book, this one actually has no real link at all to Sweet Starfire. It’s not set in the same places at all, and seems to be only loosely related.
It’s not a bad thing though, since the book is a great adventure romance, with a little paranormal thrown in for pleasure!

Another older sci-fi romance, it’s an enjoyable read for those who like sci-fi romances, and a more retro theme.
Profile Image for Kimm.
91 reviews8 followers
August 26, 2024
1980s

It's hard to read this book now in the #MeToo moment. Not that he quite rapes her. It's just the 1980s schtick of "you are my wife, you will do what I want." And of course, the one night he forces her, she is overcome with lust and lets him have her. Mind you, different world and what-not, but I am glad romance books aren't written like this anymore. I know for a fact that Jayne doesn't write like this anymore.
Profile Image for Donna.
1,385 reviews
March 26, 2022
Fascinating story. This book has the smooth writing style, wonderful characters, and riveting plot that represent Krentz at her best. The story seems more complex than those more recently written by her but I think the same thing about the books that are set on Harmony. Needless to say, I like almost everything this author has written.
Profile Image for Sue Gosland.
1,216 reviews2 followers
Read
May 1, 2022
This book was fascinating. Building an entire social system and world, while capturing the romance in that world has to be Jayne Ann Krentz's biggest talent. There isn't a book she has written that is not enjoyable, tightly written and romantic. I love her books, and this one is no exception. I loved the way the story of Ridge and Kalena unfolded through the book. Classic JAK.
Profile Image for Joyce.
36 reviews
January 12, 2024
Fantastic world and love story

Jayne Ann Kenya creates stories that are so exceptional that I cannot stop reading and stay awake for hours. This story of Kalena and Ridge is a prime example. The world and path that she created for their HEA will keep you spell bound to find out each next twist and turn. This is story of light & dark and feminine & masculine.
Profile Image for Louise A.
226 reviews1 follower
July 25, 2021
The Ying and the Yang ☯️

Re-reading this story so many years later, I am still impressed with its cohesiveness. The plot resonates the theory of "for every action, there is a reaction."
Profile Image for Shelley.
540 reviews5 followers
November 7, 2023
Dark and Light

Kalena and Ridge are the light\ice and dark\ fire of the spectrum.They are united as a trade marriage.She has secrets.He has honor.Together they begin a perilous journey.Great world building and strong characters.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 86 reviews

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