Having read other books by Kendall Ryan (The Gentleman's Mentor, Filthy Beautiful Lies) I wanted to like Bait and Switch so much...and yet, it fell seriously flat for me.
First off, the book is nothing like the synopsis.
I’m a rescuer. It’s in my DNA.
Stray dogs. Stray women.
But this one doesn’t need rescuing.
She needs something real, but I never keep the ones I rescue.
I could let her go… but I can’t watch her walk away.
I’m an ex-Navy SEAL, and I never give up on a mission.
Nolan *is* and ex-SEAL, which we know because he and the author tell you REPEATEDLY. He meets Lacey, who does in fact actually need rescuing, which we know because she and the author tell you REPEATEDLY. Only Lacey DOESN'T tell Nolan she needs rescuing. Well, she does, but it's a one-line comment while he is busy trying to get jiggy with her, and he ignores it and she doesn't push for him to understand her dilemma. Very off-putting.
Second, the author has repeatedly stated in social forums that is NOT a love triangle and that there is no cheating. It's not a love triangle because he doesn't love the roommate he is currently screwing, and he never has sex with the roommate after he decides to have sex with Lacey. There is still sexual activity that occurs, but not penetration and he personally didn't "enjoy" it. So because he is not "sleeping" with both women, and because both women know about each other, it's not a love triangle and it's not cheating, in the author's viewpoint. I disagree, but I perhaps could have gotten over it had the sex at least been good.
Third, the writing was just terrible! I say this with a heavy heart because I personally could never write a book and get it to 272 pages from point A to point Z without getting lost along the way, so anybody that can write a book and do so deserves all the credit in the world. But I don't feel this author did get from point A to point Z, not clearly anyway. See the following examples of outright liberties with the story telling:
- Lacey and Nolan meet at a bar. He thinks it's by chance, she knew he would be there and arranged it so he would see her, like her, and want to talk to her, and we know this not because it was acted out, but because the author TOLD us this is what happened.
- We know that Lacey needs protection, but not from who or from what. She planned to meet Nolan and attach herself to him for his protection, but she never tells him about it. We don't know how she knows who Nolan is, where he would be, or that he would like her, it just is. And to go to all that trouble, but yet he doesn't ever find out she needs protection until it's too late.
- A few times in the story there is a white car she thinks is following her. We know Lacey is scared because the author says she is, not because Lacey ever actually acts scared. Again, instead of telling Nolan, this becomes a non-issue until all of a sudden it's an issue. We know because of the white car Lacey should be frightened, and Lacey mentions it in her inner dialogue in passing, but then she never acts on her suspicions.
- Lacey is kidnapped because her ex-boyfriend was a drug dealer and absconded with a lot of money, so the thugs are coming after her now to get it back. She is living on a $10/hr part time job, even though I know of no one who can pay rent and all their bills on $10/hr part time, and yet they think she has the money or that by getting her they can get to her ex. These are supposedly hardened criminals, and they don't touch her in any negative capacity except to tie her up. Never mind the fact that we are told how responsible and mature Lacey is, and yet she dated a jerk her father did not approve of, who ended up being an abusive drug dealer, and is someone she stayed with for YEARS. Because that's real responsible and mature.
- Lacey's dad turns out to be Nolan's boss. Nolan had worked with him for years and never knew he had a daughter. He is so interested in getting into Lacey's pants but never gets her last name. Lacey is in dire need of protection but doesn't tell her father (or Nolan). So when she gets kidnapped and her father is on the phone to Nolan within minutes, it's not surprising that Dad knows exactly who took her and the exact location of where she is being kept. Nolan shows up and without police backup he enters, has a minor interaction with the perps, rescues the princess, and then escapes, without any incident, and without any law enforcement of the kind. We find out that police came after they left with the main witness and any evidence on her person, and the perpetrators still get maximum jail time.
- The characters are pretty sure they are in love with each other, even though he is providing sexual services to a roommate and they themselves have not done more than finger-bang each other because they are "taking it slow". Not to mention every conversation they have starts and fizzles within a page or two. In fact, there is so very little dialogue at all to this book that we know the characters love each other because the author tells us they do, not because their interactions were sweet and romantic, or that there was depth and meaning displayed, so that every time a convo starts, it ends immediately with no substance to have occurred. We know they love each other only because she says so.
- The sex scenes are so very uninteresting. The very first scene is ok, but it's the only one like it. The second major scene between him and the roommate is primarily spanking, which gets her so high she's in subspace and has to be brought down carefully so that she doesn't bottom out. There was nothing remotely interesting to read or feel, we are just told that is how it happened. There is no sex of merit between Lacey and Nolan, a lot of high school getting through the bases each time they see each other going a little farther, but because they are "taking it slow", nothing of merit.
Over and over and over through this book we are told what is happening, we are told how to feel, and we are told what the results were. At no time does the author make you feel the characters emotions at any time. This book came off like a juvenile writing assignment, not at all like a book written by someone that has published 10 other books. This author is one of many self-publishers that are in such a hurry to get books out, that they don't take the time to hone their craft.
Maybe it's because I have read true masters of the genre in Lexi Ryan or Rosalind James, or maybe it's just that I was just never able to get over the idea in my head about what I thought the book would be about and what it was actually about. I would tell you what I thought it would be, but maybe I'll save that idea for when I actually decide to write that book I've always wanted to write. I certainly don't think I could do worse than this book here. I just couldn't connect with the characters or the writing style, and I have no clue how there are so many 5 star reviews on it. If 5 is the best a book can be, what are people comparing it to to give it a 5?! So in closing, my opinion is that this is not worth the time it would take to read it. Sorry Kendall!