Die bildhübsche Brittany Callaghan verbringt in ihrem verschlafenen kalifornischen Heimatstädtchen ein ruhiges und ereignisloses Leben - bis eines Tages der umwerfen aussehende Hüne Dalden an ihrer Haustür klopft. Brittany weis sofort, dass endlich der Mann ihrer Träume vor ihr steht. Dalden hat ein unglaubliches Geheimnis: Er behauptet, ein Krieger von einem weit entfernten Planeten zu sein und hier auf der Erde eine gefährliche Mission erfüllen zu müssen. Doch die eigenwillige junge Frau ist fest entschlossen, den geheimnisvollen Fremden nicht mehr aus ihrer Galaxie zu lassen...
Johanna Helen Howard was born on March 10, 1952 in Germany, where her father, Edwin Dennis Howard, a soldier in the U.S. Army was stationed. The family moved about a great deal when she was young. Her father always dreamed of retiring to Hawaii, and after he passed away in 1964 Johanna and her mother settled there to honor him.
In 1970, when she was still in school, she married Ralph Lindsey, becoming a young housewife. The marriage had three children; Alfred, Joseph and Garret, who already have made her a grandmother. After her husband's death, Johanna moved to Maine, New England, to stay near her family.
Johanna Lindsey wrote her first book, Captive Bride in 1977 "on a whim", and the book was a success. By 2006, with over 58 Million copies of her books have been sold worldwide, with translations appearing in 12 languages, Johanna Lindsey is one of the world's most popular authors of historical romance.
Johanna's books span the various eras of history, including books set in the Middle Ages, the American "Old West" and the popular Regency England-Scotland. She has even written a few sci-fi romances. By far the most popular among her books are the stories about the Malory-Anderson Family, a Regency England saga.
Johanna Lindsey died on Oct. 27, 2019 in Nashua, N.H. She was 67.
A waste of paper and ink. Heart of a Warrior strived to be a sci-fi fantasy romance, but pretty much under-delivered across the board. At 400+ pages, with its hollow insta-love romance and pointlessly complex world building, it's a train wreck that most definitely overstayed its welcome.
For the first 100+ pages, I was mildly amused by its campiness, featuring leather pants wearing 'alien warrior', a sassy A.I. constantly referring the heroine as 'Doll', and a villain trying to brainwash an American small town just so he could have a 'kingdom' to rule. Heart of a Warrior is essentially a vintage 60s Star Trek episode, with its tacky pseudo-science techs and Renaissance faire-inspired wardrobe, and I actually would've eaten it up with glee. Unfortunately the deflated plot offered no intrigue for the remaining 300+ pages, (the last 50% is just an endless cycle of the heroine being unconvinced she was now on a different planet), and a spark-less romantic pairing accompanied by one annoying A.I. sidekick, who had more conversation with the heroine than the hero.
Heart of a Warrior doesn't seem to understand its own joke; with the absurd setup, it should've embraced the dumbness and gone down the extra silly mile, like the over-the-top 80s alien comedies My Stepmother Is an Alien or Earth Girls Are Easy, but instead it laboriously constructed a universe with contradicting facts, offered no real drama or conflict, and sidelined the romance for some half-hearted commentary on women's rights.
This is my first read from Johanna Lindsey; I will still give her remaining catalog a try, but her sci-fi is a big NO for me.
The third and final book of this trilogy hits close to home. That is, if your home is Earth.
Dalden, the twin brother of Shanelle from Keeper of the Heart, and the son of Tedra and Challon from Warrior's Woman has always tried to deny his non-warrior half.
That denial is put to the test when he meets his lifemate Brittany. Brittany is a carpenter in a small town in California. Not only has she always supported herself, she has done so in a traditionally male profession. She is certainly not willing to turn into a submissive female, no matter how deeply she falls in love.
This book ties up the Ly-San-Ter family story very nicely. All family members are accounted for. We get to meet Martha again (like she would have allowed herself to be left out of the story.) We even get to see some old villains return.
Although the loose ends are all tied up, there is still enough of a story that further sequels are possible. It has been a number of years since Heart of a Warrior's publication, but Johanna Lindsey waited a long time between books two and three.
*Reread Review* This was actually the first book I ever read in this series which means I started at the end. Fear not however, if you run across this book and you haven't read books 1 and 2 there is enough backstory to make you aware that other books came before this as well as give you what you need for this to stand alone without any sense of confusion. This book may be my favorite in the series because it deals with an Earth FMC and we get our SF/Fantasy brought home in a way that makes sense. Its like oh this is all made up in the head of the author until it shows up on earth's doorstep lol.
Brittany is our FMC in this book and our MC is Dalden who is on a mission to retrieve some of the Sunder mind control rods stolen by Joren from the last book. Brittany gets caught in the middle as Dalden's guy and of course he goes Warrior on her and makes her his lifemate without any questions asked. Now Brittany is on her way to some new world as the first earthling being made aware of this vast collection of universes.. but she doesn't quite believe anything except for her feelings for Dalden. Our MC Warrior is perhaps the most sensitive as well as understanding of the warriors we have met so far and that puts Dalden as #1 for me in this series. Another thing that really tickles me pink about this series is the form of punishment offered to warrior females doesn't have hardly any effect on our earthling female. Makes me happy since I don't really understand how its effective at all but I digress.
So glad I've done a reread of this series. I am still a little heart broken that nothing like this has ever run across my reader eyes since first discovering it. For being such an old read I still feel like this is a relevant series in the paranormal world!
Summary: Dalden has been a supporting character in earlier books from this series. He is the twin brother of Shanelle from Keeper of the Heart, and the son of Tedra and Challon from Warrior’s Woman.
Brittany is a carpenter in a small town in California. She has spent her life learning how to perform every aspect of construction so that she can build her own dream home from scratch with her own two hands. She is very close to having the funds to start building on the land she already owns, and she has no intention of letting a man or a romance stand in her way. She craves love, but her unusual height and her steadfast virginity have turned many men away.
Dalden lands on Earth in pursuit of rods that were stolen from another planet. The rods are mind control devices and need to be destroyed before they are used for evil purposes. Having never been to Earth before, and being completely unaware of Earthly customs, he seeks out assistance from the first person he meets – Brittany. And before you know it, a romance ensues.
Review: This was the very first book I have put down without finishing. It was absolutely terrible. I have loved many of Johanna Lindsey’s books, so I kept thinking that it was going to turn around and get better, but that never happened. About half-way into it, I finally gave up. I wish I hadn’t wasted my time and money.
It was torture to read all of the ridiculous lectures from the spaceship’s computer. The dialog between the living characters was almost as horribly robotic as the computer. The storyline was pointless and uninteresting, and I had zero interest in the love story. Dalden reminded me of Brendon Fraser’s character from the movie Blast from the Past, circa 1999. Considering that movie was about a caveman and this book is about highly advanced aliens, I’m sure you can tell that the comparison is not a compliment.
This book is definitely NOT the quality that I expect from Johanna Lindsey. She can write fantastically intense love stories in a wide variety of settings and eras. I’d happily recommend several of her other series, but this one will not be among them.
After Dalden Ly-San-Ter finds out that who was once one of his friends, has taken vital weapons of a sort, he knows that he must go after him and retrieve these weapons. These weapons are called "Rods" which if used properly can influence men to do whatever the holder of rod desires. His friend being a royal, but having no kingdom to rule, has decided to go to a place where he can rule. This planet is Earth, which takes about Dalden three months to reach aboard "Martha's Ship" and with his sister and brother n law coming along for the ride. However he never expected his life to change after this adventure of meeting a stubborn, independent yet beautiful Brittany Callaghan. When Brittney see's a very tall yet captivating man standing not to far from her, at the mall, and looking lost she endeavors to help him out. Brittney however never knew that that small act of compassion would get her struck with a true barbarian warrior. When Brittney realizes that Dalden is obviously from a far away land, she decides to help him out with his dilemma of finding Jorran (Dalden's ex friend) in doing so, she finds herself falling for this intense man that keeps her on her toes. Even though she tries to deny it to everyone, even herself, she is about to embark on a adventure that will change her life to last a lifetime.
I have to say that this is the only one of the Ly-San-Ter series that I finally managed to get a hold of to read. I have to say its one of my favorites, and I have really loved reading this series. This one was a bit different than the other two previous books though. I think I loved Dalden, he seemed to have both sides of his parents civility and barbarism. I know that probably sounds insane and not possible, but somehow Lindsey worked it out that I Dalden is one of my favorite Alpha's. Because despite the culture he has been raised in, he is much more able to compromise with Brittney. Now Brittney, is unlike any other heroine, she is pure wit in this one. I had to laugh through the whole thing, because she doesn't want to believe in space ships, or "aliens" from other planets, well she sure gets the shocker of her life. It takes her quite some time, before she allows everything that she see's to be real, but once she starts to accept her new life, she more accepting of Dalden and who he is and where he comes from. All in all in was one hell of a ride, filled with surprises that I totally delighted in. It was a pure bliss to read such a read as this, will all its intricate delights and adventures that has your head spinning with the thrill of the story that will capture you heart.
Plot was very appealing. A big 7' tall Viking looking blond alien warrior travels to Earth to retrieve a box of the control rods stolen. These were introduced in Book 2 as was his sister and also the current villain who continues to make trouble here. He plans to take over the Earth. Into this situation comes Brittany, a very common sense earth girl. Our warrior is immediately struck by her and enlists her aid in finding the villain. So far, so good.
Now our heroine has a flaw. While appearing to have practical common sense, she makes up things in her head. For no reason she decides he from a dessert country and keeps picturing camels and tents. Irritating. Not that many 7' tall blond Viking types in Arabia. Later when she is told they are aliens, she decides they are a movie production. From then on she decides everything is fake. After chapters and chapters of her insisting everything is fake, I am thinking this is the stupidest woman ever, and a insult to the intelligence of earth women everywhere. Also thoughts about why the warrior was choosing such a stupid woman began to come up. By stupid I mean willfully ignoring reality in favor of making up some ridiculous story that is impossible. The end was a HEA.
Read the back at the ubs - sounds good - Nordic god, Viking shows up on her doorstep, hmmm...sounds promising!
Page 6 - what? she's a virgin and approaching 30? Page 11 - gaali stones on Sha-Ka'an as an energy source....wtf? Good grief, they meant OUTER SPACE warrior, not time-travel warrior!
2 more pages and I snorted/laughed out loud - husband turns to me inquiringly....and I am too embarassed to explain the plot to him. Now I've explained a lot of ridiculous plots to him over the years (Fantasy Lover by Sherrilyn Kenyon the most embarassing to date) but this takes the bloody cake.
I've learned 3 things from reading the first 13 pages of this book: 1- I really dislike books about old virgins (unless it's Outlander) 2- Outer Space/Aliens + Romance novel = Ridiculous 3- Johanna Lindsay, I'm sticking to your "real" viking novels. They are so much more realistic ;)
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
You know I have to say with this whole series how impressed I am with the complete world building. This series first started in 1990 and it just goes to show what tremendous talent and imagination JL had. The technology aspects alone were so inventive since in that time we were only starting to have cellphones (the bricks) and computers outside of businesses were pretty irregular. Also in her stories the romance always shines through. I loved how Dalden was patient and so loving. A gentle giant barbarian for sure. Brittany was annoying in her stubborn disbelief so that's why the 4 star rating. I loved this series from JL since I was a teen. It's still good enough to reread every few years or so.
This is the third book in the Ly-San-Ter Family series. The first book focuses on Challen and Tedra. The second focuses on Challen and Tedra's daughter Shanelle, and this one on Shanelle's twin brother Dalden.
While Shanelle choose to embrace her mother's sensibilities, Dalden has ignored them as much as possible, trying to be the model Sha-Kar'ani Warrior. It has been a year since Shanelle's "marriage", and the family (minus Challen) is returning home from a visit to Tedra's home world Kystran.
They receive a distress call from a planet which does not have deep space traveling abilities. Mind control devices, introduced in the previous book, have been stolen by a "king" in search of his own world to conquer. There is no time for the multi-world authorities to go after the "king", so Dalden offers to take on that responsibility.
After they send Tedra home -- no interstellar communication, so Challen would be worried about their delay -- they set off for a three months travel distant planet which has not yet had contact with other worlds. A rather familiar planet ... Earth.
Brittany is your typical 21st century American woman, of the blue collar hardworking self-sufficient variety. She has dated very little because her height, and her male dominated choice in professions. She is thrilled to find a perfect male specimen in the middle of the mall, of all places.
Dalden has learned the language, through their sublim technology, but he's still out of place transferred (aka teleported) into the middle of a mall. When Brittany first sees him she misinterprets his expression as that of being on the verge of panic in the middle of a crowd. She drags him to the side, thinking she saved him. There is instant attraction (on both sides), if rather socially and culturally awkward conversation. Brittany turns her back at one point and Martha transfers Dalden out of there.
Brittany goes home pouting at the loss of her dream guy. In the meantime, Dalden convinces Martha that he needs a local guide, and guess who would fit the bill. So he just transfers to her apartment, almost giving Brittany's roommate a heart attack.
Brittany helps Dalden retrieve the mind control devices, thinking he's a secret agent from some country she's never heard of. She's thinking shiek type territory. But when the mission is over, and she's transferred up to the ship with the rest of them, she goes from thinking foreigner, to thinking the whole thing is some vast secret project - testing her reactions to an alien conspiracy.
A solid contribution to the series, although I preferred the previous two books, the first being my favorite. The "lovers from different worlds" plotline having a different vibe here where there is a heavy communication barrier and a more continuous sense of doubt going than was seen in Tedra's story, where she was the alien on a planet that didn't know it wasn't alone in the universe.
The whole plot could be described shortly - they meet, fall in lust, beat the bad guy, he tells her he is from another planet, she doesn't believe him, they travel through space, she still doesn't believe him, they land on his home planet, she still doesn't believe him, she sees some unusual things, she still doesn't believe him, she gets almost killed and instantly healed, well, then she starts to believe him. Meanwhile they fall in love and the bad guy reappears for an almost insignificant role (it felt like he was there again only to make it easier for the author) and that is that.
Boring boring boring. It seems I prefer a pure s-f, not alien coming to earth, or if the latter, then the maybe slightly less logical, but more flexible approach of the earthling believing and accepting the alienness of her chosen one.
How can you not give Lindsey 5 stars?? Her books are just so heart felt and well written. I think this new generation doesn't care for them solely due to the 3rd person writing but if you can deal with that, you will just fall into her world. I hate that I can never see these characters again. I would have loved to see Tedra and Challen as grandparents and to see what became of the town after Brittany added her touch.
Британи е обикновено момиче от земята. Заради високият си ръст, винаги й е било доста трудно да си намери приятел, а когато вече бившето й гадже й заявява, че заради ръста си, е подходяща за кратка връзка, но не и за брак, тя напълно се отчайва. Докато не среща висок, мускулест и невероятно привлекателен чужденец, който решава да я наеме като гид за града,в търсене на опасен престъпник. Скоро Британи е напълно увлечена по Далден, и смята, че може би е намерила мъжа на живота си, но това което я плаши е факта, че мъжа се оредставя за извънземен от друга планета. Британи е убедена, че това е измама, и се бои, че Далден е актьор играещ роля. Дали едно пътуване с космически кораб до варварската планета Ша-Ка'ан няма да я убеди, че всичко е истина?
Далден Ли-Сан-Тер се озовава на планетта Земя в търсене на Джоран, един от кралете на Сентура 3, който е откраднал пратка с променящи палки и смята да превърне планетата в свое собствено кралство, хипнотизирайки лидерите на всички държави и завземайки властта. Тъй като Далден е този, който е говорил за палките пред Джоран, той се чувства пряко отговорен и решава да го последва, за да го спре. Това, което не е очаквал е на тази нова планета да открие своята другарка в живота. Британи е умна, красива и страстна. За Далден това е любов от пръв поглед и той е решен да я направи своя и да я отведе в дома си.
Книгата е хубава. Харесвам Далден още от предишната книга и се радвам, че имахме възможност да се насладим на историята му. Той е умен, силен, съобразителен и много чаровен. Всяка страничка с него беше тотална наслада. Причината да дам 4 звезди е в Британи. Въпреки, че беше сладка героиня, много се дразнех от това как отказваше да признае, че това, което вижда е истина. Постоянно си измисляше какви ли не простотии и оправдания за това, което виждаше. Беше като магаре на мост и ми идеше да я удуша. Отделно ми се искаше повече време да бяха прекарали в Ша-Ка'ан. Повечето време бяха на земята, занимавайки се с Джоран, после доста време в космоса, където видяхме повече от Марта и Британи, отколкото от Далден. 30% от книгата беше преразказ на това, което бяхме научили от първите 2 книги, и някак ми дойде излишно.
One of the worst books I've ever read. It really didn't make a lot of sense, and I found the idea of this to be "barbaric" I was expecting a normalish novel but instead I got a romance thrown into a Sci-Fi novel, or maybe it's the other way around, who knows. I don't think someone who generally writes romance should try and delve into something like Science Fiction. Even though we know it's science fiction, it still has to be believable. and this ladies and gentleman, was the worst display of fantasy I've ever come across. I did not read the first 2 in this trilogy, which might be part of the problem, but I still don't find this to be believable.
I felt no connection with the characters, and I found Dalden to be super uninteresting. We know nothing at all about him, he is not funny, or romantic, or anything. He, like the rest of the characters, are very robotic and cold. I felt very disconnected and was not interested in his purpose for being on Earth. The whole idea of this was totally ridiculous.
Honestly if you're looking for anything science fiction related, I'd tell you to hit the young adult shelves. It's way more believable, and written a thousand times better than this was.
Lindsey combines the best of romance with the best of SciFi in this novel. The multiple, well developed worlds presented in this novel, as well as their interactions, were quite intriguing. I was completely enchanted. Because I haven’t read the 1st two books in the series it took me a bit to catch up on the background but then I was hooked. That said, I’ll definitely be reading (and re-reading) the entire series. Lindsey’s eloquent writing alongside the picturesque descriptions brings everything to light in a very brilliant manner.
Readers get to spend some time with absolutely unforgettable characters in this novel. The main characters are so honest and heartfelt that you can’t help but love them. I also found myself laughing at the situations they found themselves in. You can’t help but wonder just how everything will work out for them. Surrounded by the multicultural group of secondary character, you get a taste of what life must be like for everyone. It was absolutely breathtaking.
My final thoughts? He may not be perfect, but I definitely need a warrior life mate of my own.
What am I reading!?! I can't stop laughing, and I just started! So, I finished reading. My thoughts, let's see...what a waste of my time and why would Johanna even attempt to write sci-fi romance, it was horrible and laughable. Why did I even finish reading, you ask, well because I actually wanted to know how it ended. And it ended badly. What's funny about it, No Climax, and in both uses!! lol. That's the punishment for the women on the planet, the men get the women all hot and bothered and then leave them to suffer without getting any!! Hahaha what a joke! Total let down for a story line, I will not be reading the first two in the series. The dialogue between the computer Martha and Dalden, you'd think it was the other way around. And Brittany with her constant unbelief, I guess seeing isn't believing in her case.
I was really undecided whether or not to give this book 3 stars or 4. It is not the type of romance I normally read, however, I found myself wanting to find out the rest of the story, so in the end, I went with 4 stars.
This book almost got nixed after reading the first two chapters. What I began as a romance, was turning into sci-fi.
Even after finishing the book, I have mixed feeling about it. I found myself wanting to scream at times with frustration over many situations. Also, it was that instantanious attraction and not being able to live without the other, which is hard for me to swallow.
-5 stars. Is there a way to give a book negative stars? no. Ok well there should be. Cuz daaayyymmmnnn this was THE worst book I think I’ve EVER read, hands down. I hung in there hoping that something, anything in this book was going to get better. After about 1/2 way through I just gave up! I couldn’t take it anymore. The loooonnnngggg, SUPER boring, constant (and I mean constant) lectures and explanations by Martha killed any hope of redemption in my eyes. IMO Johanna Lindsey needs to stay away from the Sci-Fi cuz this was so forced and just bizzaro that I can’t even. A huge disease because I have always been a fan of her work. Overall: Don’t just walk, RUN away from this book.
Connan Junior (Daldon) has gone on a mission to earth to retrieve some stolen goods. This is where he bumps into Brittany an Irish American construction worker. The first half of the book was three star, but after the started the three month journey back to Sha-Ka'an it was not engaging. Daldon was a silent figure when he should have been the main focus. Martha talked and talked while reciting all the history of this series from past books. By the end, I was sick of Martha. In previous books she enhanced the story...this one, she brought it down a star.
It was really annoying, how the girl in this story would not believe that the man she fell in love with was from outer space and took her on a space ship to another planet. She thought it was a joke, a hoax, a scam. And I got to thinking, would I believe it? What if something similar happened to me ( as if!)? What if a guy I really liked was from outer space; or a shape-shifter; or a vampire; or from a different time? Would I believe it, be gullible? Or would I be skeptical & think he was delusional? Hmmm...
The only Johanna Lindsey book I own that I never read... I couldn't get into it and I don't care much for the series Finally finished the book ! If not for a reading challenge I would not have read it at all ! It's Johanna Lindsey , which I love , but not into sci-fi . It took no time to catch the bad guy but forever to convince Brittany that Dalden was an "alien" ! Not my cup of tea ... Sorry
good. sifi romance series. standard formula. giant barbaric warriors from a super high tech planet arrive on earth chasing a rogue warrior searching for a planet to rule.
I'm not sure this book would have worked for me if it was the first one of the Ly-San-Ter series I read. Lindsey is not a good world-builder (going on the books I've read so far, this is sadly true of most romance writers who dabble in s-f), but if you're reading through the series you're well past that by now. Ditto on the annoying Warrior traits. And one of the best things about this one is that it effectively undoes one of the stupidities of the first book; the whole "punishing via sexual arousal" thing, so I can both understand and share in Brittany's fear of punishment while all the time knowing she has nothing to fear. And it's a credit to Lindsey that her own character ends up essentially pointing and laughing at what had me pointing and laughing in the first book.
I think I like this the best of the trilogy because I like Brittany the best as heroine. Tedra is annoyingly aggressive and gung-ho, while I spent most of the second book vacillating between feeling sorry for Shanelle and wanting to whump her upside the head for being an idiot. Brittany's not always the brightest, either (frankly, most Lindsey heroes and heroines are idiots a good bit of the time), but her refusal to believe that she's dealing with truly alien people didn't bother me. There are numerous historical examples of people refusing to "see" a truly alien culture, and reinterpreting it according to their own lights; Brittany's refusal seemed very human.
Brittany falling deeply in love with a guy she thought was trying to delude her was less credible, but first she makes the decision to get what good out of the situation she can, and then she decides he's probably been faked out and truly believes what he's telling her, or at least considers this as a reasonable probability, which made that part easier to take. Insta-love and doing dumb things because of it are a romance standard, so I can go with it.
I liked this conversation where Martha the computer is trying to sell Brittany on the whole idea of being stuck with a Warrior and explain where Dalton is coming from:
“Okay, let’s try on faithfulness.” [Martha]
“Excuse me?” [Brittany]
“You’ll find this interesting: a warrior who takes a lifemate will remain faithful to that lifemate for the rest of his life. I find that rather unique myself, since most cultures can’t say the same, yours included.”
“They love that deeply.”
A round of laughter. “You’re forgetting they claim they don’t experience love.”
“You said some do.”
“Some, yet all warriors with lifemates are faithful to them. It’s more part and parcel with the protecting thing. It’s a duty they take beyond serious, so it includes not only protecting from harm but also from emotional stress. And from fear. How many times now have you heard Dalden say he won’t allow you to be afraid.”
“As if it’s something he can control,” Brittany scoffed.
“Don’t kid yourself. He can and will assist you in conquering your fears, in one way or another. His methods might not be consider normal, but they’ll be effective. Warriors are firm believers in teaching by example. Lasting impressions are gained in that way that mere words can’t hope to duplicate. Which is why the old crime and punishment philosophy goes over to well here.” p. 338-339
The conversation goes south a bit for me when Martha claims that Dalden/the average warrior's methods are effective -- they would rebound horrifically with some people -- but the part about the warrior believing he has a duty to make his mate feel safe reminds me of mid-nineteenth century etiquette books, which taught that wives had a responsibility to build a home that would be a safe and comfortable haven for their husbands, while husbands had a duty to make their wives happy. In both cases the male is expected to create positive emotions in the female by eliminating negative ones. I would call this an impossible task, and yet I've read enough letters from the era to know many Victorian men took on that duty and tried to achieve that goal.
I would not want to be a wife in the Victorian era, and I would not like to marry one of Lindsey's warriors, either. And yet there's a certain appeal to a man who will take on such a task -- and even more appeal to a man who can achieve that goal. Which I suppose is a big part of the underlying appeal of this series; confident men in pursuit of goals that are worthy. While their methods are far from ideal, I can respect the goal they believe they are pursuing.
I like Lindsey for her over-the-top plots and for the glee she takes in them, but maybe I also like her because she is okay with being pretty darn corny now and then.
Meno male che almeno uno è uscito simile a Tedra, altrimenti avrei accoppato entrambi i fratelli!! Dalden è figlio di sua madre quanto di suo padre ma alla fine la "maledizione" che Shanelle gli aveva gettato nel libro precedente ha avuto compimento con un viaggetto di qualche anno luce verso la nostra cara Terra...e cosa mai potrebbe capitare se non la scintilla tra lui e un'umana come Brittany?? Il casino cosmico, visto che dovranno affrontare la sua ritrosia verso gli alieni e conciliare questa nuova avventura con l'amore nascente tra i due. Ma se un guerriero sceglie la propria compagna non ci sono mezze vie se non le più ovvie: o così o nulla. Storia divertente, piacevole e che si lascia leggere senza sosta fin alla fine. Soprattutto la questione interplanetaria di adattamento al nostro mondo, al modo di vedere terrestre rispetto a quelli degli altri pianeti. Interessante e ben costruito senza forature varie come sotto effetti di un fungo allucinogeno. Carino davvero per completare la trilogia futuristica più spassosa che potessi leggere da una romanzista rosa come la Lindsey! Aggiudicata anche con lo strafalcione precedente.
Brittany Callaghan is an unusual 28-year-old. She's almost 6' - a big issue for her and dating, and works construction during the day and as a trainer in a gym at night, so she'll have the money to build her own house with cash.
Dalden Ly-San-Ter is a sha-ka'ani warrior escorting his mother home from her home planet of Kystran when they receive a distress signal. Ansering it sends Dalden on a rescue mission to earth - 3 months of travel. Dalden meets Brittany in CA while trying to recapture an errant king looking for a new country to take over along with the altering rods he stole. Their attraction is mutual even though she doesn't believe he's an alien. Even when he takes her on the 3 month space ride to his home planet, she fails to believe. Finally, after a near fatal attack by a wild animal, she comes to her belief in Dalden and worlds outside of earth.
Good story, mostly believable, but her lack of belief for so long got annoying. Captivating for the most part though. Quite a bit of mostly tastefully done sex.
Es un libro que me ha encantado y está en la línea del anterior. Es una historia que para mí en este libro muestra mejor el mundo creado por la autora, ya que lo vemos desde la perspectiva de un ser de otro planeta que no es el nuestro y del nuestro propio. Es una historia original, diferente, se lee muy rápido ya que engancha mucho y no puedes parar de leer la. La protagonista femenina Brittany me sacaba un poco de mis casillas al no ver la realidad de lo que pasaba, aunque viendo de una forma razonable es una reacción normal aunque no por ello me sacará menos de quicio. El protagonista masculino Dalden le conocemos mejor en este libro y es tierno y paciente. Es una historia para mí muy completa y la autora como siempre tiene una forma de escribir genial en la que te hace meterte de lleno en la historia en la que no te hace descripciones interminables que no ayudan en nada a la historia, sino que da en su justa medida.
DNF -Johanna Lindsey used to be one of my go to authors back in the day. Picked up “Heart of a Warrior” surprised to see the Ly-San-Ter series now had a third book.
Shocked and disappointed to be find myself 1/3 through the book, so board it sent me searching for the nearest recycle bin. This complete waist of ink and paper lacked any plot it insults the brain. Even skimming I just couldn’t slug through, had I not lucked out and found a ♻️bin fast enough I was seriously considering bypassing the earth 🌍 friendly option and simply chucking the book into the trash.
J.L. what happened? You used to be a narrative force!?! Is the true sci-fi story more in line with … “Author body snatched by aliens! Humans too stupid to notice as imposters publish trash passing it off as sci-fi romance.”
"Corazón Guerrero" de Johanna Lindsey es una historia que, aunque tiene todos los elementos de un romance histórico, no logró convencerme. La trama sigue a una protagonista atrapada en un conflicto con un guerrero vikingo, lo que promete tensión y emoción, pero el desarrollo de la relación se siente más frustrante que romántico.
El mayor problema es, sin duda, el protagonista masculino. Su actitud es insoportable: autoritario, arrogante y con un comportamiento que en lugar de resultar atractivo, solo genera rechazo. En más de una ocasión me dieron ganas de darle una bofetada, porque su manera de tratar a la protagonista es exasperante.
Aunque el libro tiene el estilo característico de Lindsey y momentos que podrían haber sido interesantes, la dinámica entre los personajes hace que la historia se vuelva pesada. En definitiva, no fue una lectura disfrutable para mí.