"Desired" is complex, engrossing, fast-paced, and set against a backdrop as sultry as the story itself, the Louisiana bayou, 1854. When Dayne Templeton dismounts from her horse in the mist of morning, she is unaware of the stranger lurking in the shadows. Flint Rutledge, long-ago her adversary, and the town's prodigal son, has come home. Despite the antagonism of the past, Dayne and Flint are inexorably drawn together by desire. But smoldering secrets, family feuds, and vengeful passions threaten to consume their relationship.
Thea Devine is the author of eighteen historical romances and four novellas, including her contributions to the Brava anthologies Captivated, Fascinated, and, most recently, All Through the Night. Devine lives with her husband of 35 years in Ridgefield, Connecticut.
Oddly, there was both too little & too much going at the same time. Dayne & Flint had a good, gritty, Old Skool bodice-ripper relationship, but it never seemed to progress beyond the repetitive sex. Sure, you'll say, but it's erotica -- there's supposed to be a lot of sex, right? Perhaps. But NOT when the story is given ample non-sex time & fails to use it...& NOT when the closure of Dayne/Flint's plot is brought about by an army of Other Characters (some intro'd 60%-75% into the novel) instead of their own agency. Whut?? All the stuff about her brother Peter & Nyreen & Flint's random f'ing sister Lydia (who was never even mentioned until 3/4ths through) felt way out in left field; it ruined an already slow pace & diverted climactic page time from Flint & Dayne resolving their own tangled family problems.
Not nearly as good as Desire Me Only or The Darkest Heart. But as far as porny romantica with an angry alpha hero & nipple fetishes, not terrible.
The problem with this book is that Nyreen -- the scheming step mother -- is about 900 times sexier and more ambitious than pouty, sulky, not-too-bright Little Miss Dayne. When Nyreen is alone with poor, dumb, fat Harry, the bumbling father figure in the novel, and slowly sucking him dry in all kinds of sex scenes that are exhausting to read but incredibly exciting, well the book is a classic. On a very animal level! Harry's befuddled lust, and Nyreen's manipulation, are not inspiring, but they are vividly real. The human exploitation fits in very nicely with the slavery setting -- after all, people who own slaves are born manipulators and skilled at reducing others to the animal level. But Dayne and Flint are not really that good a couple. Neither seems to feel that slavery is wrong, or right either. They sort of drift through the setting without being part of it. They don't love each other, and they don't even like each other. They trade insults and then start having sex. Unlike Nyreen, Dayne has no clear cut goals and no real determination to do things her way. She just drifts from one hot love scene to another.
If you love hot romance, this book is a classic and well worth reading. But if you demand strong characters and a heroine you can admire, you should probably just give it a miss.