Madison Knight has been going through a bit of a rough patch. While her mid-century fashion sense is still sound, her confidence is flagging. She still hasn’t gotten her business back up and running after her legal troubles, and she seems to be spinning in circles trying to figure out what to do. She needs inventory but for that she needs money, and the banks don’t think her unorthodox approach and business history – even though it was profitable from the start - meet their criteria for a loan, so she gets turned down again and again and again. She decides to go to night school and get an MBA – that will show those banks! They’ll realize she’s serious and educated, staying within the box, following the rules.
We realize long before she does that she already pretty much knows everything in these classes, although watching her get dressed for class and gather her accessories is as much fun as any adventure with Madison always is. The comments about how old she is to be a student never stop, and she’s mistaken for an assistant to the professor. Her fellow students aren’t exactly welcoming, and the professor for her Risk class is especially aggressive, using Madison’s business as the case study, humiliating her and goading her into angry retorts to his comments. However, the anger and introspection this Madison feels might be what’s needed to get the other Madison back, the one that created and ran that wildly successful business all on her own.
You know it can’t be that simple, though. When the professor dies practically right before her eyes she’s in the middle again. Her relationship with Tex has just started to come out in the open, but her refusal to back down and stop her amateur investigating puts a wedge between them. And watch out when Tex goes undercover and shows up in class.
Madison is the same, comfortable, familiar Madison we’ve come to know and love. But – she continues to surprise us with her growth, her self-discovery, her insistence on always taking the path she thinks is best, whether it’s the easiest way or not. Her relationship with Tex has continued to grow as well and there are some especially sweet moments between them. And some pretty funny ones, too. Like when she sets up a fake business for the Tex/Rex of Risk class so the students can take a field trip. We see Madison in her element. While it is fun to be transported to mid-century Doris Day Land by Madison’s clothes, accessories and furniture, we realize that while, yes, this mid-century approach is a great hook for her niche business, it is also really the essence of her; this is the real Madison. So of course we have fingers crossed and are chanting little prayers that she’ll get back on track and be happy, confident and her crazy self soon.
Thanks once again to author Diane Vallere for taking me on a wonderful, satisfying journey with Madison Knight. She really is such a likeable, well-developed character (as are all of Vallere’s in all her books) that she pulls me right into her world. The descriptions of her clothes are so vivid you can picture the outfits, and green Banlon top or white Orlon cardigan trimmed with a green leaf motif were looks I hadn’t pictured in years. I think I may have had some of those clothes! The plot moves quickly, dialogue is witty, danger feels real, and every once in a while a sentence like, “Nasty was self-interested in a way that would have made Ayn Rand proud,” makes me smiles and say oh, yes. I received an advance copy of Teacher’s Threat in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own. I thoroughly enjoyed it and recommend it without hesitation.