After a hard-hitting romantic breakup caused by his misinterpretation of the unsaid, a perplexed Cooper Landry blames his past for the failure. He equates distance to therapy and accepts a career opportunity in Central America, presuming to change his fate by changing its setting. En route, the real trouble begins when his abduction and imprisonment by a drug cartel redirect his objective to survival and escape, despite forced addiction and man-eating dogs. When Quinn Daltrey, the woman with whom he shared the romance, discovers he has gone missing, she follows, intending to find and save him, though she has no plan. This literary soup is layered with adventure, romance, and thriller. Some of it is true. Much is imagined. It navigates universal desires and unbound danger as each lover follows their path to discovering that one’s destiny can be shaped rather than surrendered to chance.
In choosing this book, I expected a romantic adventure, as the subtitle says. Although I enjoyed the read, I wouldn't consider it a romantic adventure; more like a man and woman who were romantically involved but experienced separate adventures, although with a common goal. I caution readers not to cast this book aside when reading the first chapter. While I understand the idea the author was trying to cultivate, someone reading this chapter might surmise the book is about teenage erotica. But it's not. It's overall a good story, full of adventure, and well-written.