The Heat Seekers follows Tempest, Janessa, Gerren, and Dvonte. Tempest is a no nonsense, conservative social worker while her best friend, Janessa, is a more go with the flow, free spirit. They meet Gerren and Dvonte one night at a club that Tempest was pesterred into attending by Janessa. Gerren and Tempest fall in love and Janessa and Dvonte fall in bed.
I always appreciate Zane for her ability to portray an array of characters. Each character has great depth and is somewhat relatable. I was pleasantly (I think? Perhaps I am lying) surprised that there was less freakiness and more romance (again, I could very well be lying to myself to seem like a wholesome human being).
The book was good, I didn't hate it but it was also a light read so I breezed through it. Some of the terminology had me raising my brow....well both brows because I never mastered the people's brow. I am familiar with other books by Zane but some of the terms and such I was just reading like, "...but why?" I appreciate that she strayed from making stereotypical characters (she usually does. This isn't news. I just like that she does that and wanted to mention it) but some parts of their story lines were a bit cheesy for my personal liking. I did appreciate her for slightly breaking the romantic story formula of; boy meets girl, boy likes girl, boy royally messes up, boy loses girl, boy does ridiculously grand gesture in order to win girl back (If you feel this is sexist feel free to swap the boy with girl). Instead she goes with the much more mature (I think) formula of; boy meets girl, boy likes girl, boy doesn't eff up because he wants to keep girl. This formula has always made the most sense to me though it lacks drama, but the lack of drama in the romance of Gerren and Tempest is made up for in the...whatever you want to call it of Janessa and Dvonte.
I am not sure if this one will be memorable, or is memorable. It was kind of one of those, "Oh look A Book That Won't Devastate Me or Have Me in Tears" books. So it is greatly appreciated.