Hope Farrier rescues unwanted horses, but she's saddled with debt. Without help she'll lose Second Chance Farm, the first home she's ever known. An endowment brings the promise of future relief and the presence of shrewd business manager, Devlin Temple. Trouble is, Devlin has his dreamy blue eyes on more than her bottom line. Playboy Devlin Temple lays a trap for the thief that's fleecing his company. When his cousin sets his cap for Devlin's job, Devlin knows he needs Hope's help to secure the CEO position. In her arms he finds the solace and support he craves, but their blossoming romance prompts the thief to raise the stakes. Will Devlin and Hope pay the ultimate price for love?
A scientist by training, a romanticist at heart, Maggie Toussaint loves to solve puzzles. Whether it’s the puzzle of a relationship or a who-dun-it, she tackles them all with equal aplomb and wonder. Maggie writes romantic suspense, contemporary romance , and science fiction for Muddle House Publishing, cozy mystery for Camel Press, Henery Press, and Muddle House.
She has five published romantic suspense novels: House of Lies (won the 2006 Readers Choice Award for Best Romantic Suspense), No Second Chance (won 2 cover awards), Seeing Red (LASR book of the week), Muddy Waters ( Beacon finalist), Hot Water (EPIC finalist, cover art winner), and Rough Water.
Her mystery titles include In For A Penny, On the Nickel, Death, Island Style, Murder in the Buff, Dime If I Know, No Quarter, Gone and Done It, Bubba Done It, Doggone It, Dadgummit, Confound It, Dreamed It, All Done With It, Seas the Day, Spawning Suspicion, and Shrimply Dead. She also wrote a romantic mystery novella series, The Lindsey & Ike Mysteries.
Her next release, SNUFFED OUT, is tentatively scheduled for January 2023 under the pen name of Valona Jones.
Her works blend mystery and romance, often with a dash of humor.
She's a member of Southeast Mystery Writers of America, Sisters In Crime, and Guppies. She was awarded the WRW Magic Crystal Award in 2004. She also won Silver Falchion Awards, the National Readers Choice Award and the EPIC ebook Award. She's been a finalist for Georgia Author of the Year three times.
Plot and motives were ok but lacked development - too much telling, not enough showing. Relationship conflicts were superficial.
STORY BRIEF: Hope’s parents died in a car accident. Five years later she received an inheritance which she used to buy a horse farm. She creates a refuge for abused and mistreated horses called Second Chance Farm, a non-profit charity. She’s not a good business manager and is not good at getting donations for the farm. Lillian is a wealthy woman dying of cancer. Lillian leaves a large amount of corporate stock to Hope with certain restrictions. One of those is for Hope to let Lillian’s son Devlin (Dev) manage the business side of the horse farm.
Lillian was CEO of TES corporation until her illness. Now both Dev and his cousin Ray want the job. Someone has been stealing money from TES. Dev hires a private investigator to find the thief.
Someone has been causing problems for Hope, letting the horses loose at night, damaging property, calling state inspectors, etc.
Dev is a handsome wealthy bachelor. Women chase after him. Hope is a curvaceous redhead who was hurt by her former boyfriend. She feels insecure about having sex. She gets claustrophobia in elevators. She feels like she’s from the wrong side of the tracks when compared to Dev.
The book is short, about 2/3 the length of an average romance novel.
REVIEWER’S OPINION: The thief parts of the story are not developed at all. The thief does about a dozen bad things, but we don’t see any details showing the thief’s stealth and cleverness or the thief’s thoughts and actions. For example, the thief figures out how to embezzle money, but we don’t see it. Was he using stolen laptops or going into the office at odd hours, how did he get passwords, what lies did he tell others while doing this? All we are told is that he “figured out how to steal the money.” We don’t know how many times or how much.
The plot and motives concerning the thief were ok, but my problem was the lack of details and development. Events are “told” and not “shown.” I would have loved seeing the conversation and details about how the thief found and hired a guy to attack Hope – totally omitted.
Another problem is that after each attack, Hope and others don’t do anything logical to investigate or solve them. For example Hope receives a phone call asking her to visit Lillian. She drove there, was inside for maybe 30 minutes, and then returned to her truck to drive home. The thief had to have been following Hope, waited, and then walked up to the truck to unhook the trailer - all this without being seen. No one asked Lillian’s employees or neighbors if they saw anyone or a car waiting nearby. Also the thief had to have had a car parked near the farm for long periods of time to be able to stalk and wait for opportunities to do things to Hope. But no one questions neighbors or looks for places a car could be hidden nearby. Repeated bad things are happening on the farm, but some of that might be avoided if Hope got a dog that would bark when a stranger approached. The result of all this is too much of a helpless victim feel with no action to respond. The theme seems to be “what awful thing am I going to suffer next?”
I wanted to know more about Lillian’s thoughts and motives concerning Hope and Dev. I would have liked seeing some events or conversation before Lillian decided to give so much to Hope. Also why did Lillian keep asking Dev to date Myra? It felt thrown in and never answered.
Regarding the relationship between Hope and Dev, the conflicts felt contrived and unsatisfying. I’m willing to go along with most types of conflict, but the following bothered me. It didn’t feel right because Dev’s actions implied one of the most common insults men do to women, but he didn’t clarify it. What did he do? After he slept with her for the first time, he didn’t call her again for a few weeks. He had a strange reason, but he didn’t tell her. So as a reader I was insulted on her behalf with the feeling of “once they sleep with you they no longer want you.” Then, later to solve the conflict Dev just changes his mind, and they are together again.
Later Dev says something mean to Hope which I had a hard time believing, but it caused Hope to leave him. The problem is solved when Dev later goes to her and says he wants her back. Better conflicts might be based on interesting personality differences or vulnerabilities. I’m not sure how to describe what would improve this.
CAUTION SPOILER concerning motive (I DON’T give away the thief’s identity): Lillian makes a gift of stock to Hope. The thief’s primary motive is to hurt Dev. But once Hope gets the stock, the thief wants Hope to give away the stock and stay away from Dev, apparently. So why did the thief do bad things to Hope BEFORE she got the stock and had interaction with Dev? That bothered me. It wasn’t clear. It felt like the author was trying to confuse the reader with actions not supported by motive. It wasn’t well thought out.
DATA: Story length: 192 pages. Swearing language: strong. Sexual language: none. Number of sex scenes: 1, three pages long. Setting: current day Baltimore, Maryland area. Copyright: 2007. Genre: romantic suspense.