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Listening Length 11 hours and 24 minutes

When a food storage depot in famine-struck South Sudan is torched, American aid worker Brie Stewart flees, only to land in a market where she’s the next item up for auction. Is the attack on the aid facility another assault upon the war-torn fledgling democracy, or has her family set her up as a pawn in their quest for oil rights?

Chief Warrant Officer Sebastian Ford crossed paths with Brie years ago when she was a shill for her family’s company, pushing a pipeline that threatened his tribe’s land. Determined to lead the rescue operation to save her, he won’t let her abduction—or the attraction that flares between them—get in the way of settling their unfinished business.

The Green Beret’s skills are put to the test in the flooded grasslands of South Sudan, where they must battle nature and dangerous factions who are after more than oil. Bastian and Brie put their hearts on the line as they find themselves embroiled in a conflict that extends beyond country and continent. Together they must douse the spark before it reaches the flashpoint and engulfs everything they hold dear.

11 pages, Audible Audio

First published November 21, 2017

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About the author

Rachel Grant

49 books1,630 followers
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USA Today bestselling author Rachel Grant also writes thrillers as R.S. Grant. She worked for over a decade as a professional archaeologist and mines her experiences for storylines and settings, which are as diverse as excavating a cemetery underneath an historic art museum in San Francisco, survey and excavation of many prehistoric Native American sites in the Pacific Northwest, researching an historic concrete house in Virginia (inspiration for her debut novel, CONCRETE EVIDENCE), and mapping a seventeenth century Spanish and Dutch fort on the island of Sint Maarten in the Caribbean (which provided inspiration for the island and fort described in CRASH SITE).

She lives in the Pacific Northwest with her archaeologist husband and demanding cat.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 181 reviews
Profile Image for Erth.
4,599 reviews
January 29, 2020
This book was great. The story line held you from start to finish especially to the finish. Rachel Grant knows how to write intrigue, drama and LOVE!! She never disappoints. Hopefully there will be a third book in the Flashpoint series featuring Savvy and Cal, author hinted as much with the "tension" between them. Loved that a character from the Evidence Series made an appearance and helped to save the day; also :Pax and Morgan made an appearance from Tinderbox the first book in the Flashpoint books. .Readers will enjoy this book, I know that I did. Wish it was a couple of chapters longer to see how Brie and Bastion's future went.
Profile Image for Anita.
2,647 reviews218 followers
August 24, 2018
Rachel Grant is one of the very best authors of romantic suspense, ever. This author and this book have the highest recommendation I can possibly give. The story is compelling and the reason is that the civil war torn countries in famine background for this book is real. Great character development, a solid suspense/mystery and a searing romance just add to this fantastic book.

Brie Stewart, aka Princess Prime, daughter of Prime Oil billionaire, Jeffery Prime, is an aid worker in the civil war-torn African country of South Sudan. When the food storage depot is attacked her co-workers are captured, giving Brie a chance to flee. Why anyone would set fire to food for starving people is beyond comprehension, but Brie knows that evil reigns in this land and that some players are not above this atrocity, even her own family.

Chief Warrant Officer Sebastian Ford, US Army Green Beret, had an encounter, and not the romantic kind, with Brie 10 years ago when she was a spokesperson for Prime Oil. Beautiful, slick and a shill for her family’s company, she was pushing a pipeline that threatened his tribal land. His impressions of her were not at all kind, but hot fantasy all the same. When she goes missing he is determined to lead the rescue operation to save her. Finding Brie in a slave market about to be sold, their escape ends up testing both of them and the attraction that is between them.

Cut off from the others on his team, Bastian and Brie must survive in the flooded grasslands of South Sudan where Bastian's skills as a Green Beret are put to the test as they battle nature and the people responsible for the destruction of the food depot, who are still after Brie. Just who and why are part of the mystery surrounding them as the also battle themselves.
Profile Image for Caz.
3,270 reviews1,176 followers
December 18, 2017
I've given this a B+ at AAR, so that's 4.5 stars; but it was within a hairsbreadth of an A-

I’ve become a huge fan of Rachel Grant’s particular blend of complex, steamy and intricately plotted romantic suspense novels over the past year or so, and have been eagerly awaiting the release of Catalyst, the second book in her Flashpoint series. Like the previous book, Tinderbox, Catalyst is set in a real-life flashpoint, this time in South Sudan, a young nation embroiled in an ongoing civil war, and features characters based at the (fictional) US military outpost of Camp Citron in Djibouti. There are some things in this book that may be difficult to read about – in particular the buying and selling of women and children – and the way that the plight of so many people in desperate need is thrust aside in favour of big business and political expediency made my blood boil on more than one occasion. Ms. Grant tells a gripping, well-paced and impeccably researched story that pulled me in from the start and kept me transfixed until the nail-biting conclusion.

Chief Warrant Officer Sebastian Ford is surprised to recognise a familiar face one night in the bar at the camp – Gabriella Prime, the daughter of Jeffrey Prime Sr., owner of one of the world’s largest energy corporations. The last time Bastian saw her, she was in full ball-buster ‘Princess Prime’ mode – designer clothes, killer heels, full make-up – in her role as Prime Energy’s PR executive, defending the company’s plan to screw over the native American tribes of East Washington by building an oil pipeline that would ignore even the most basic environmental rules. The woman in front of him now, a decade later, is different, though. The outward trappings of the corporate shill and billionaire boss’s daughter are gone; over the last decade, Gabriella Prime has cleaned up, grown a conscience and left her old life behind her. She deliberately sabotaged PE’s plans for the Northwest oil pipeline, cut all ties with her father and brothers, legally changed her last name to Stewart (her mother’s name) and for the past five years has lived and worked under the radar for USAID in South Sudan. Bastian is rather stunned to discover that Brie Stewart is an aid-worker who lives from pay-day to pay-day like everyone else – and maybe a little suspicious that such a ruthless leopard could have changed its spots, but he has to admit to a reluctant admiration for the guts it must have taken to thwart her father’s plans and then to re-invent herself. But that doesn’t tell him what he really wants to know – which is what she’s doing in Djibouti hanging out with the camp ‘spook’, the enigmatic CIA operative, Savannah James.

One month later, the aid station Brie works at is attacked and she and her three co-workers are forced to flee for their lives. Brie manages to evade capture for a couple of days, but her luck runs out and she is taken to the very slave market she had been summoned to Camp Citron to talk to Savannah James about.

Bastian and his team are authorised to get Brie out – but when they discover that the slave market also houses a large number of children, none of the team can bear to leave the kids there and make impromptu plans to get them out as well. Unfortunately, things go awry, and Brie and Bastian are stranded when their vehicle and equipment fall victim to roads made impassable by the heavy rains. They hole up at an abandoned village while Bastian works on a way to get them out of there, knowing they likely haven’t got long before the Sudanese soldiers who originally captured Brie find them. During the few days they spend alone together, the attraction that had sparked between Bastian and Brie back at the camp builds to inferno levels and becomes increasingly difficult for them both to resist – although resist they must. And do. With difficulty. While they await rescue, they try to work out why Brie’s camp was targeted – was it a random attack? Had her family somehow found her and orchestrated the attack to get her back? Or is something even more sinister going on that neither of them can yet comprehend?

The kidnap and rescue is only the beginning of what is a superbly conceived and plotted story that pitches Bastian and Brie into the sights of a Sudanese warlord with links to the Russian mafia, and a dangerous former associate of Brie’s father who is obsessed with her almost to the point of madness. The vile plan this person hatches is so utterly despicable that it fairly took my breath away; and although he is perhaps a little over the top, his scheme is, sadly all too plausible.

Once again, Ms. Grant achieves just about the perfect balance between the disparate elements of this romantic thriller. She obviously knows her stuff when it comes to the geo-political background of the region in which the book is set, and the way she utilises that knowledge and interweaves it throughout the story to forge a cohesive, compelling tale of corporate greed, military ambition and terrifying obsession is quite masterful. Her central characters are just as multifaceted as her story and the romance that develops between them simply drips with sexual tension from the moment the pair of them face off at the bar in Camp Citron. Brie and Bastian have more than their share of baggage and neither of them has had any desire for much more than hook-ups and casual sex in the past, but as the attraction that burns between them gradually starts to encompass admiration and respect, it becomes clear that this relationship is unlike any they’ve had before. I admit to finding Brie’s tendency to beat herself up over her past choices a little irritating, although she does have an inner mental strength that is admirable and I liked how she was able to find something positive to focus on once the revelation over her identity meant she was no longer able to work for USAID.

Although some characters from Tinderbox make an appearance here – most notably Pax, Cal and Savanna James – the book works perfectly well as a standalone, and fans of Ms. Grant’s Evidence series might also recognise a certain enigmatic Russian spy who pops up to lend a (very dangerous!) hand. A great combination of action-packed, intelligently-written, edge-of-the-seat thriller and sexy romance, Catalyst is an engrossing read and earns a strong recommendation.
Profile Image for Dísir.
1,735 reviews187 followers
October 24, 2017
I’ve always thought of Rachel Grant as the romantic suspense author who goes where good authors of this sub-genre go, then where most books actually end, takes it a breath-stealing mile further. Where entire books would have been written around a sex-trafficking plot, Grant integrates hers with a smartly-written overview of cultural anthropology, native American issues and the knife-edge balance of the socio-political situation in Africa that makes her Flashpoint series beyond excellent.

‘Catalyst’ is written pretty much in the same vein as its predecessor: thrilling, engaging and entirely absorbing, particularly if you love the kind of geopolitical background (with some corporate dirt thrown in) that Grant painstakingly unravels—which I do—in a part of the world that’s hardly written about in such books. For that alone, I can’t wax lyrical enough about this series, which is akin to seeing a complex chess-piece that’s put together in a narrative arc that makes it feel as though there’s yet unfinished business to conclude.

It’s also almost a given that her characters are equally multifaceted, and it’s my own fault that I didn’t quite warm to Brie and Bastian at all, with the former being more manipulatively needy and self-pitying because of her past than I expected, while the latter was too careless with people and unashamedly being Bastian the bastard about it. The games they later played with each other because neither of them could get a handle on commitment also didn’t help my ability to like Brie/Bastian as a pairing while as Brie’s ‘rich girl’s woe-is-me penance’ got tiring after a while. That said, the first half of ‘Catalyst’ enthralled me more than the second, where I found I needed to suspend disbelief a bit more when it seemed that many of the mysterious threads laid out so intricately in the first half were actually tied together by an obsessive man in Brie’s past.

The action and suspense are nonetheless very well-done and I was especially taken by the hostile tension between Savannah James and Cal whose book I hope Grant tackles next, as much as I loved the appearance of one of Grant’s best heroes in the Evidence series here.

*ARC by the author
Profile Image for CD {Boulder Blvd}.
963 reviews95 followers
September 10, 2018
I like this author's writing but a number of items kept me from enjoying the full book.

First, I really liked the backdrop of this story and the development of the fight for oil profits, the USAID aspects, the discussion of the poverty and abuse and treatment of the poor citizens of these countries. This backdrop was well crafted.

But the plot of this book, the development of this backdrop were overshadowed by elements I didn't like. I really, really did not like the two leads. I didn't like their crude conversations and I could have cared less if they f**ked or not. I certainly didn't enjoy the numerous pages dedicated to sex or just discussions of sex. I skipped way too many pages. They treated each other way too poorly before they decided they loved each other.

It was also hard to believe that the evil Drugov with all his supposed connections and power didn't simply have her kidnapped in the middle of the night and have her disappear before the various events of this plot occurred. His plot for her felt very convoluted. I just didn't buy it. Plus all the evil people weren't developed much.

I found myself setting the book down time and time again struggling to get through it. The last bit was a solid action scene but too little too late. I need to enjoy the whole book.



Profile Image for Caz.
3,270 reviews1,176 followers
December 18, 2017
A gripping romantic thriller set in one of the world's flashpoints - South Sudan - in which the kidnap of a US aid worker sets in train a series of unprecedented events and uncovers a deadly conspiracy. My review of the book is HERE, but the audio version is even better, a great story enhanced by outstanding narration from Greg Tremblay. The man doesn't seem able to deliver a bad performance!
Profile Image for Jewlsbookblog.
2,209 reviews74 followers
April 29, 2019
I love Rachel Grant’s heroines. They’re typically sassy, smart, and capable. They don’t necessarily rely on the hero to save them; rather they work in tandem as a team to save each other in a variety of situations. Brie Stewart is no different. She has a lot of issues and she does tend to lament her poor decision making in her younger years often, but I took it to be her way of reminding herself she has come a long way since then. Her coping mechanisms and tough facade came from a backbone forged in steel and darned if I didn’t feel pride whenever she stood her ground in difficult circumstances!

Then there’s Chief Warrant Officer Sebastian Ford, aka Bastian. I wasn’t totally on board with him after some jerk moves in Tinderbox (book 1 in the Flashpoint series) when he was messing with Pax and Morgan, so going into Catalyst I admit I wasn’t his biggest fan. And while he’s still arrogant and has moments of obnoxiousness, I learned he has almost as many issues as Brie. He just appears to handle his ghosts..somewhat better. Knowing what I know now made me sympathetic to his character and I have to say I liked him more than I thought I would! It didn’t hurt that he obviously met his match with Brie either...

Book two in the Flashpoint series, Catalyst had a lot going on! Rachel’s ability to weave fiction and fact seamlessly allows her to bring issues to a reader’s attention in aN entertaining way. Brie’s aid work in Sudan highlights the real food shortage issues and civil war/power struggles I was only cursorily aware of from the news. It gave me a new crinkle in the brain and something to study up on and learn more about. Secondary characters Morgan and Pax make an appearance, as does Cal and Savannah (Which speaking of..PLEASE, tell me Cal and Savy are next!) and there’s also a surprise cross reference with a character in the Evidence series. Overall, Catalyst had a strong plot, great suspense, and a fantastic romance that I’m happy to recommend!

I voluntarily reviewed an advanced reader copy of this book which I received at no cost from the author.
Profile Image for Rachel Grant.
Author 49 books1,630 followers
Read
December 17, 2018
So, this happened...
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I'm so thrilled that all three Flashpoint books are Kirkus Reviews' Best Books!!
Profile Image for Rih.
201 reviews
November 9, 2017
Catalyst is only the second book in The Flashpoint series and already becoming another of my favorite series by Mrs. Grant.
Sometimes fiction has its way to highlight a cruel and sad reality in our current real world, this book accomplished that. I was captivated from the very beginning by the plot and all the sensitive themes that are addressed though the book, at times I felt sick knowing the fiction in the book is the reality of many. Bastian is a hero that struggles with his immense love and resentments toward his family, country and his feelings for a heroine that he thought represented everything he despised. Brie is a heroine seeking for absolution and ways to mend the ugliness that her family has created by working for humanitarian groups while battling her own personal demons and twisted villains in a land with everything is for sale. South Sudan is a land of famine, civil war, slave markets, insurgents groups, countries that profit from the continuing government instability, and private companies from powerful countries that seek the total dominion of the energy and oil. I was delighted surprised by the appearance of a character that I like very much from another of Mrs. Grant’s series and I can’t wait to know more about Savanna James.
Profile Image for Dawn.
1,075 reviews51 followers
January 22, 2021
What a great book! Rachel is one of my favorite authors and this is book follows Pax and Morgan's book. This is Bastian's and Brie's book.

The storyline is stellar, the characters great, even the bad guys, and the momentum is a great paste that will keep you interested through the entire book.

As always I feel like I always learn something new from this author and it keeps me coming back for more. As always, I'm ready for the next book!

I received this ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Mandi.
2,352 reviews733 followers
December 3, 2017
The setting in South Sudan felt well researched and realistic - the military stuff as well. It's a very detailed, military rom-suspense.

I didn't love the pairing of the h/h - their romance didn't do a ton for me - overall though, an okay read - I'll probably give it a C+

Review coming
Profile Image for Angela.
233 reviews2 followers
November 9, 2017
**I received an Advanced Reader Copy for my honest review**

Catalyst can really be broken down into two separate books. The first section features Brie escaping a USAID compound in South Sudan, captured and taken to a slave market where she’s rescued by Bastian. At that point, they go on the run to avoid capture by those hunting Brie. The second section features Brie and Bastian going to Morocco to take down a Russian oligarch trying to start genocide in South Sudan – who also happens to have an unhealthy obsession with Brie.

Both of these sections could be completely separate novels and, honestly, I’m not sure they tied together as seamlessly as they could have. Don’t get me wrong, I enjoyed this novel. It’s just that on the one hand, you had Brie and Bastian trying to survive on barely having enough food and clothing in some of the worst conditions you could imagine. On the other hand, you had them in Morocco in a palace with servants around every corner where every desire is granted. I suppose that was part of Rachel Grant’s plan – to show the utter differences between the two worlds. And in that regard, she did a fantastic job so obviously I’m contradicting myself and they did tie together seamlessly! Ha.

The storyline was well developed and thought out. It shows that Ms. Grant did her research. The descriptions were vivid and I could picture the images easily. The romance between Brie and Bastian was the perfect push and pull. I’m one of those readers that wants the coming together of the characters to happen quickly and yet, I quite enjoy the slow development. Some of the intricate details regarding the storyline outside of the romance portion were a little confusing but that might just be me and it never once got to the point where I was taken out of the story. I did find the appearance of Ivan to be a little startling. The last time I read about him was in the Evidence series where his life circumstances were quite different. I won’t give much away for those that haven’t read the Evidence series – and if you haven’t, I suggest you do. I appreciated the author’s note at the end giving a little explanation for his presence in the book.

I have two main critiques of the book. The first being that there wasn’t an epilogue. It would have been nice to have a little time jump to see if Brie had been able to patch things up with Rafe. I also would have liked to know if Bastian’s parents accepted Brie into the fold and how they felt about things. The second was the subtle (or not so subtle) political statements. This is my review – my opinion – but all I’m saying is that when I’m reading, I am doing so for entertainment. I’m doing it to escape the outside world. I’m just not a fan of authors inserting their own political beliefs into their novels – particularly if it doesn’t enhance the novel any. Having said that, I realize that – just as I can insert my opinions in my reviews – the author can insert their opinions in their novels.

On another note, I appreciated Ms. Grant highlighting the problems in South Sudan (and I do not see this as a political issue as it’s a human issue). Americans don’t often think about the fact that girls often have to drop out of school when they reach puberty. The availability of sanitary products for those girls would literally change the course of their lives. In a world where we’re constantly being shown republicans and democrats fighting each other, it’s sobering to be reminded of – and encouraged to donate to – issues that other countries are dealing with that can, at times, make our problems seem small and petty. Just something to mediate on.
Profile Image for Mei.
1,897 reviews471 followers
February 1, 2018
As everybody know I'm a huge fan of Ms. Grant's books! :)

This story could be divided into two parts.

The first is happening in South Sudan where Brie is attacked and put on sale as slave and where Bastian rescues her and they have to run and hide in the Sudanese desert while every villain in the vicinity is chasing them.

The second is in Marocco, where they have to track a Russian pervert and Sudanese mass-murdering general for the CIA.

IMHO, the first part was way better than the second. I loved how strong and resilient Brie was. I also appreciated how she changed from a Prime Princess to a USAID operative. Also Bastian was interesting with his Special Forces training!

The one thing I couldn't understand is why they didn't act sooner on their sizzling attraction. They're alone is an abandoned village and the only time they jump each other is in the open and during daytime, while they resisted their attraction when they were in the hut during a downpour and night??? Obviously, thet's the time the villains attack!

The second part was a little bit shaky for me.

While recuperating after their rescue in Sudan, they have sex and seem to form a solid relationship, but Brie, after telling Bastian why she changed her name and left her family (a very bad family!), toss him out because she's afraid of getting attached... Bastian, who wanted to tell her that the CIA operative Savannah (who we meet again!) practically forced him to exctract precisely that story from her, doesn't get a chance to tell her and, angry and confused about her rejction spills evrything to Savannah!

As you see, both their behavious was very immature and impulsive and I didn't like that!

So, forced by Svannah, they got to go in Brie's Marrocan house, as lovers, to tease the Russian mafioso (who has his eyes on her since when she was 13!!!) and find out if he hides the Sudanese General exiled for genocide.

But both of them are angry at each other and the behave like bickering children, while trying to project the lovers vibe for her brother's behalf.

They get lip-locked then the offend each other pocking fingers into each other's worst fears and grivances. He accuses her of being the money grabbing Barbie Princess, she accuses him of being jealous of his parents' love for his ex...and thet's just one example... Very childish...

Obviously all that makes them pay less attention to the things happening around them and to the danger all around. And there's a lot!!!

But, I'm able to forgive them, because they're so obviously right. Yes, I know, it doesn't make sense. Brie did have a shitty life with her family and Bastian was pushed away from his family. So The wounded way they react when cornered is quite normal.

Still, I appreciated Ms. Grant's reasearch and her willingness to use a very actual third country situations as the background for the novels. Here she handles child/women slavery (and not only sexual one!), famine, diseases, poverty, greed, hunger for power, pedophilia, biological warfare... It's actually really chiling to think that everything in this book can happend (and probably is happening) somewhere in real life!

So, even if I had some problems with the MCs, I loved it and for me this book is a solid 4 1/2 stars rounded to 5!

I'll be looking forward to the next one that, as the author states on her site, will be about Savannah and Cal! :)
Profile Image for Christa Schönmann Abbühl.
1,170 reviews22 followers
June 10, 2020
The second book in the series is as good as the first. „Bastian the bastard“ makes for a spectacular hero. But the subject is hard to read about. This is no fantasy setting, but a very ugly side of the real world. I will certainly continue with the series, but I need to pace myself. And yes, this is part of my privilege, to decide when I am ready to confront those issues.
The author provides links to aid organizations on her website, to give the reader a chance to actually do something useful.
Profile Image for romancelibrary.
1,366 reviews583 followers
June 5, 2020
4.5 stars

Note: Content warning in spoiler tag at the end of review.

Catalyst is the second book in the Flashpoint series and Bastian Ford, the not-a-bastard-after-all, gets his HEA with Brie Stewart, former oil princess turned aid worker. Bastian and Brie crossed paths for the first time years ago when Brie was still the face of her family's oil company and was pushing for a pipeline to be built on Bastian's tribal land. The premise here is relevant to current issues, especially here in Canada where the government is pushing to expand the Trans Mountain pipeline on traditional territory.

Years later, Bastian and Brie cross paths again at Camp Citron in Djibouti, where Bastian's Army Green Beret team is stationed. Brie is now an aid worker and after clashing with Bastian in Djibouti, she returns to South Sudan to continue her work, but gets kidnapped to be auctioned in a slave market. Bastian and his team lead the rescue operation and while they are able to free everyone who was being sold in the market, Bastian and Brie find themselves isolated in the flooded grasslands of South Sudan.

From Djibouti to South Sudan to Morocco, Catalyst is a fast-paced romantic suspense, part survival romance, part undercover romance. Honestly, I was nervous and unsure about how the author would approach this type of enemies-to-lovers romance given the very-real conflict between this white heroine and this Native American hero. I am not Native American, therefore, I cannot ascertain the veracity of Rachel Grant's representation of the hero and this conflict. As a reader though, I think the author did a great job redeeming the heroine and showing us how and why she changed through her actions, words, and behaviour. Bastian's perception based on the past definitely influences his opinion about Brie and it takes him a long time to realize that she has changed. The character development for both Brie and Bastian is incredibly well-written. Fantastic redemption arc for Brie, who herself was a victim in many ways.

As for the plot, man, the plot takes a really dark turn that surprised the hell out of me. Catalyst is definitely darker than Tinderbox, the first book in the Flashpoint series. I am absolutely shocked at how far the author took the plot in this book. I thought the villains in Tinderbox were evil, but the villains in Catalyst are pure evil. Overall, this was a fantastic romantic suspense, if a little too long. I think my only complaint is that I wanted to experience Brie's meeting with Bastian's family. I also wanted to see how Bastian mends his relationship with his parents.

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Profile Image for ‘Sup?.
312 reviews
November 4, 2017
4.5*

I have been waiting for this book since before I even finished TINDERBOX, the preceding book in the Flashpoint series! Rachel Grant is one of my all-time favourite romantic suspense authors and indisputable auto-buy because her work is both the epitome of everything romantic suspense should be and incredibly educational without being pedantic, all wrapped in a superbly written package. In less skilled hands, CATALYST would simply be a pulse-pounding story of human trafficking and sexual slavery with some sexy military men, but Ms. Grant elevates it into a nuanced story of geopolitical instability in an oft-forgotten part of the world set against a backdrop of Western corporate greed and amorality, Native American issues, and the machinations of the intelligence community… whilst delivering an engaging cultural anthropology lesson. CATALYST will suck you in from the get-go and not let you come up for air until the very last word.

It’s a testament to Ms. Grant’s skill as an author that I liked the book so much despite only being lukewarm towards its protagonists, Special Forces Chief Warrant Officer Sebastian (Bastian) Ford and former-billionaire-oil-heiress/schill-turned-aid-worker Gabriella (Brie) Stewart Prime. I was not a fan of Bastian coming into CATALYST based on his arsehat behaviour in TINDERBOX, and he did little to improve my opinion of him throughout most of CATALYST: his judgmentalism, carelessness with people, and giant chip on his shoulder did little to endear him to me. Same with Brie’s self-pitying, woe-is-me reformed little rich girl penance (though I liked her much more than Bastian from the outset). But it’s the very fact that Ms. Grant’s characters are so imperfect that makes them so compelling and real-- no one likes everyone they meet in real life, and authors shouldn’t strive for that unattainable ideal. And, despite how much they both want to deny it, their chemistry is off the charts… and they make each other better versions of themselves, irrespective of how likable one finds those improved versions.

CATALYST is an excellent addition to an already stellar and weighty body of work for Ms. Grant. If you haven’t yet read a Rachel Grant book, do yourself a favour and pick one--any one!-- up ASAP.

**ARC received from the author in exchange for an honest review (and if you’ve seen any of my reviews, you know I don’t feel compelled to wax poetic about books I didn’t like, regardless of who the author is and how I got the book!)

Profile Image for Traann.
913 reviews11 followers
October 31, 2017
Catalyst by Rachel Grant is the second book in her Flashpoint Series, and just like the first book, it grabs you in the first few pages and you won’t want to put the book down until you have finished it. There are characters from the first book in the series, Tinderbox, but if you haven’t read that one, you will not be lost by reading this book first.

The book starts out in a club in Camp Citron, Djibouti with Chief Warrant Officer Sebastian “Bastian” Ford, looking for, and finding, a woman he never expected to see in that part of the world. The day before he thought he had spotted her in an office on base. He was looking for Gabriella Stewart Prime, or Princess Prime, as the media had called her 10 years ago. She was the daughter of a Billionaire who was the CEO of one of the worlds largest oil companies, and last time he saw her, she and her families company, was trying to take over tribal lands in Washington State, where Bastian was from. He finds her but she has changed and it really throws him. She now goes by Brie Stewart and every word out of her mouth confuses him and makes him rethink what he thought.

Brie, now a USAID worker, helping the South Sudanese people return to their villages after civil war displaced them, doesn’t remember Chief Ford but then again, there is much from her past she can’t remember. Back then she worked 16 hour days for Prime Energy, drinking, drugging and having sex indiscriminately, so much so, that she asked Bastian if they had sex 10 years ago. It is with questions like that, that Bastian can’t reconcile the spoiled rich girl from the aid worker woman now in front of him. They part but that will not be the last time they see each other.

Move forward a month and an attack on the village that Brie is working in brings Bastian and Brie back together in an unexpected way and the sparks start flying, literally, and all hell breaks loose.

I don’t want to give the story away but if you like suspense, military and romance then you will LOVE this book. If you even like this book (again, I think you will love it) then please try others of Rachel Grant’s books. No matter which one you pick up, you will not be disappointed. I can’t wait for the next book in the series and I think you will feel the same way.
Profile Image for Tonya Burrows.
Author 47 books1,147 followers
May 16, 2018
Really enjoying this series. If you like my HORNET books, definitely give this one a go.
Profile Image for Connie Harris.
1,532 reviews3 followers
May 11, 2020
This is a must read series!

Bastian and Brie, another great team. This story was another edge of my seat page turner. This series is really awesome!
Profile Image for Iman.
581 reviews17 followers
January 6, 2019
Loved it but less Than the first one, maybe because Bastian was less swoony?
Profile Image for Jenny L.
27 reviews1 follower
June 2, 2024
I love Rachel Grant books but this one got a little too real in some parts.
Profile Image for Crystal.
2,499 reviews64 followers
January 25, 2023
4.5 Stars
This book was so much better than I ever imagined it would be. And had I not needed the subject matter for a challenge, I would have probably never read it. The plot and tropes involved are just not things that interest me. I'm not a fan of military or political plots, don't like trafficking/slave auctions, seriously try to avoid anything heavy as a plot when those same things are happening as current events (in this case, the pipeline issue and civil unrest in Africa). Add in that the book contains my ONLY trigger, racism, and I felt sure that this was going to be a book that I not only struggled through, but also hated. So imagine my surprise when I was sucked in before chapter 1 was even complete!

I was immediately drawn to the enemies-to-lovers vibe between our characters, and that the the background setting (where he's from, and where they initially met) was local to me. I listened to the audiobook, and while there was a single narrator, I thought he did a great job, and since it was written in 3rd person, it didn't bother me. The book did have a heavy plot, but there was enough snark/humor and love between Brie and Bastain, that it was manageable for me to get through. This was book 2 in the series, and while we do meet the characters from book 1, I didn't feel like I was missing anything by not reading Tinderbox first. That's not to say that I won't go back now, because this author has a way with storytelling, and I'm pretty sure that I don't want to miss out.
Profile Image for JoAn.
2,458 reviews1 follower
November 16, 2017
Catalyst by Rachel Grant is The Flashpoint series' second book. Although I had not read the first one, I never felt lost or confused. This book stands alone without any problems for a reader.

Ms. Grant has written a thrilling and suspenseful book that captured me almost from the start. Her descriptive narrative of South Sudan and the desperate struggles that the people who live there go through each day broke my heart. I am quite sure that Ms. Grant researched this country thoroughly and the situation as she represented it is, unfortunately, real for the Sudanese people. She also touches on the issues faced by Native Americans in the USA. Ms. Grant's books are always filled with real world situations that most of us are only vaguely aware of in our daily lives.

A complex plot that moved fast, suspense, action, characters that were not only well developed but evolving throughout the story, and a romance that should have set my Kindle on fire made this a book that I didn't want to put down. Now that it's done I'm going to have to read it again just to enjoy it all over again.

I voluntarily reviewed an Advance Reader Copy of this book. All of the above opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Jo.
1,491 reviews12 followers
November 20, 2017
Rachel Grant is slipping. There is no explosion for at least the first 10 pages, if not more. But, honestly? That’s really the only issue I have with this book. And a made-up one at that!

Both characters are wonderful. Both strong in their own ways. Both with their own weaknesses. And yet written with such a strong chemistry with each other that it is impossible not to get drawn into their story.

But as is always the case, the plot does not play second fiddle to the love interest. Oh no. People/sex trafficking, political maneuverings, corrupt big business. All hanging together as a plot with accomplished ease.

Another winner.

I voluntarily reviewed an Advanced Reader copy of this book.
Profile Image for Sheri.
Author 6 books40 followers
August 24, 2018
I'm a Rachel Grant fan and Catalyst didn't disappoint. It's another great read.

It took a while for me to really like the heroine, because it took a while for her true personality to be revealed. The ending of this book is a roller coaster ride. I envisioned it like I would a movie. It should be a movie! Very exciting, with action that doesn't stop.
Profile Image for Amy.
432 reviews21 followers
December 11, 2022
mf - contemporary romance - green beret Native American hero - formerly rich humanitarian heroine - enemies to lovers - action/adventure romance - set in Africa - high steam - 5 stars. Brie was a great and complex heroine and what a combo! Bas worked to protect the land rights of his tribe from the evil energy company Brie’s dad owned and she worked for.
Profile Image for Karin.
546 reviews
June 29, 2024
Flashpoint Book Two.

Brie Stewart has been running from her family and her past for years. That is, until Sebastian Ford recognizes her and brings everything back. Bastian is ready to put the spoiled princess in her place, but he sees through her shell to the vulnerability under the surface. When Brie is taken, all Bastian can think about is rescuing her.

If you're looking for a story about transformation through fire, this is the book for you.
Profile Image for CLM.
2,898 reviews204 followers
September 9, 2018
Interesting characters but I found the plot of this book absurd and unconvincing. On the other hand, I am curious about the most interesting person in this series, Savannah the FBI operative, so I guess I will continue reading . . .
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