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Rocky Mtn. Rescue

She was Out to Capture a Killer

Becky DiFalco was trapped - snowbound - in the Rockies with two men. One, the sexiest man she'd ever seen; the other, the shrewdest killer she'd ever been up against in her years with the Colorado Bureau of Investigation. When she'd answered the "officer down" call, she had a feeling it was a setup. She was right.

He was Out to Capture Her Heart

Jack Slade wasn't sure why Becky had agreed to assist him on the mission, but he suspected she had ulterior motives...and he was hoping he was one of those motives. He was wrong.

With Becky and Jack working at opposite ends, the killer had it made. Now he just had to make sure they never came together....

An icy blizzard rages...and heated passions burn...

256 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published February 1, 1998

11 people want to read

About the author

Carly Bishop

27 books6 followers
As an author for the Harlequin Intrigue imprint, Carly Bishop has published 14 novels. She wrote one title for the Harlequin Temptation line.

Bishop is a pseudonym for Cheryl McGonigle.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
178 reviews2 followers
April 16, 2018
Doesn't come close to her other books
January 15, 1999
Several times while reading "Watch Over Me," I had to check the cover to make sure who the author was. I don't know what Ms. Bishop was doing while she was writing this was, but it was pretty close to terrible. Becky DiFalco has been lured to Rampart, CO by a notorious serial bomber who has remained underground for years. She knows that he has brought her there for a purpose, but she knows that she is just as determined to catch him as he is to trap her. But when her sting begins to go terribly wrong and a blizzard threatens to let the man escape, Becky is forced to turn to Jack Slade, a former FBI agent and long-lost love, who is anything but happy to see her.

There were so many problems with the writing it's almost hard to remember them all. First, it takes forever for the two main characters to meet-it's well after page 50, and their romance isn't exactly going to have anyone reaching for their kleenex. It's about as romantic as you would expect a book about two people climbing a mountain in a blizzard to be. (I don't know about you, but page after page of struggling in the snow, almost frozen to death, isn't the stuff to start me swooning. Worse, it's not even exciting.) Some much-needed tension is introduced at the very end (too late), but a final plot twist was too ludicrous for words. And just when you think the lackluster writing and rhythmless plotting couldn't get worse, the book simply stops. One minute, it's terribly downbeat; one paragraph later, there's a happy ending and the book's over. There's no resolution to Becky's relationships with the two men in her life: Jack and her father. Instead, Bishop spends time trying to justify the killer's actions. Yeah right. The huge margins and wide spaces make it clear this book is shorter than your average Intrigue. Overall, a lazy effort--and it shows.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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