Exciting romantic-suspense novel from 2000 that has aged well
For over half of his life, 34-year-old Navy SEAL, Lucky O'Donlon, has been flitting from one temporary fling to another—always with a tall, slender, buxom beauty. Blessed with a handsome face, a ripped physique, and irresistible charm, not a single woman who has caught his roving eye over the years has ever turned him down. Until he crosses paths with lovely Sydney Jameson, a savvy, cynical, 35-year-old journalist. From the first moment Syd encounters Lucky, she’s got his number, and she refuses to allow the man she mentally labels, “Navy Ken,” to manipulate her with his overwhelming sexual charisma.
Syd and Lucky are both part of a joint task force involving the local police, the FBI, and several SEALs from Lucky’s San Diego-based SEAL team. While Syd has voluntarily signed up for the task force, and Lucky has been ordered by his Commanding Officer to participate in it, they are both equally passionate about accomplishing its urgent mission—tracking down and capturing a serial rapist. This vicious criminal has attacked a string of local women, including Syd’s next-door neighbor, a virginal, 19-year-old college student. In the process, it has become apparent to the police that the perp is becoming increasingly violent. At any moment, he may escalate from raping and beating his victims into outright murdering them. Lucky’s involvement in this mission becomes even more critical when evidence at the scene of several of the recent assaults indicates that the rapist may possibly be a current or former SEAL.
FAVORITE QUOTE: "He was physical perfection, pure, dazzling masculine beauty….He wasn't just hot, he was white hot. Unfortunately, he was also insensitive, narrow-minded, egocentric and conniving [and] Sydney didn't like him--a fact she conveniently seemed to have forgotten when he kissed her."
This is the ninth book in this exciting, romantic-suspense series. It is not absolutely essential to read these books in order, because each is written as a standalone, and none has a cliffhanger ending. However, Lucky is an especially noticeable subcharacter throughout this series, because he has shown up in significant cameo appearances in each of the previous eight books. As a result, his main character trait, as a “love ‘em and leave ‘em” guy who is fervently determined to never, ever marry, has been well established in the preceding books, and it is firmly reasserted in this novel as a main romantic conflict between Lucky and Syd. From Syd’s side, there is an added romantic conflict that she has been disappointed in love enough times in the past that, even if Lucky were not a self-declared, perpetual bachelor, she would have had difficulty trusting him as a potential serious, romantic partner. On top of that, even though Syd is a slender, pretty woman, she considers herself nowhere near being in the league of physical beauty of Lucky himself or the exquisite “Barbies” whom “Navy Ken” typically dates.
It is a challenge of no mean order, within the exceedingly limited word space of a romance novel of only 50,000 words, to provide a convincing growth arc that morphs a hero who is an unrepentant womanizer into a man who is wildly in love and passionately committed to settling down into a monogamous marriage with children—which is the expected, Harlequin HEA as much today (2022) as it was in the year 2000 when this book was first published. When you add on top of that difficulty the fact that an action-adventure plot runs side-by-side with the romance plot, consuming at least half of those 50,000 words, it becomes even more tricky. Fortunately, Brockmann is aided in creating Lucky’s transformation by several reliable Harlequin conventions: (1) This is a slowburn plot, which allows the reader to believe that Lucky wants far more from Syd than a quick roll in the hay. (2) There is no gutter language during the sex scenes (in fact, no foul language at all anywhere in this book), which further raises the tone of the relationship from raw sex to tender sensuality. (3) The primary focus in the kissing scenes and eventual consummation scene is on the intense emotions that Lucky and Syd are feeling for each other, rather than a graphic recitation of heaving body parts. In addition, while the action-adventure plot does take up a lot of page space, it actually serves to advance the romance plot, because the “fox-hole buddies” phenomenon systematically mows down the main, mutual romantic conflict, disrespectful distrust. In the midst of shared acts of derring-do, the superficial aspects of Syd and Lucky’s personalities are peeled away, exposing a deep core of integrity and bravery. This factor—which exists in all romantic-suspense novels, not just this one—is consistently used by romance authors to make it credible that two commitment-phobes, who typically start out as enemies, or at the very least adversaries, could fall deeply and mutually in love within a matter of days or, at most, weeks.
Not every single book of this series offers a climax for its action-adventure plot which thrillingly involves most of the SEAL team members who are the heroes of the 11 initial books of this series. However, that is definitely the case in this book, and it provides an extremely satisfying conclusion for the evil-rapist plot.
Trigger Warning: Scenes involving rape can potentially rouse traumatic feelings in survivors of rape but, because this is Harlequin, there is no on-stage enactment of rape or any post-mortem, detailed descriptions of rape.
Overall, though this novel was originally published more than 20 years ago, it has aged well, and it is still an enjoyable read that does not feel particularly dated. In fact, every one of the first 11 books of this series constitute some of the best writing Brockmann has ever done. Sadly, however, the two books that she tacked onto this series 20 years after the fact are not remotely as good as the original 11, and for me personally, they are barely worth a first read, and definitely not worth a repeat read, as these older books are.
This is the order in which this series was originally released:
1) Prince Joe, June 1996
2) Forever Blue, October 1996
3) Frisco's Kid, January 1997
4) Everyday, Average Jones, August 1998
5) Harvard's Education, October 1998
6) It Came Upon a Midnight Clear, December 1998 (Subsequently renamed: Hawken's Heart)
7) The Admiral's Bride, November 1999
8) Identity: Unknown, January 2000
9) Get Lucky, March 2000
10) Taylor's Temptation, July 2001
11) Night Watch, September 2003
12) SEAL Camp, May, 2018
13) King’s Ransom, December, 2020
I rate this book as follows:
Heroine: 4 stars
Hero: 4 stars
Subcharacters: 5 stars
Romance Plot: 4 stars
Action-Adventure Plot: 4 stars
Overall: 4 stars