Leticia “Letty” Thornquist’s Great-Uncle Charlie died of a heart attack, whilst doing the thing he most loved in the world – fishing – leaving her his Seattle-based company, the camping and sporting goods giant Thornquist Gear, Inc.
Thornquist Gear’s CEO, Joel Blackstone, is left fuming. Firstly, he doesn’t believe a twenty-nine-year-old academic librarian from the Midwest knows “a balance sheet from an unabridged dictionary”. Secondly, he considers that the company belongs to him, as he’d spent ten years building it up from the ground. Thirdly, Charlie had promised to let Joel buy him out in another year. And, fourthly, and more importantly, she would be a deterrent to his 15-years-in-the-waiting, personal vendetta against Victor Copeland of Copeland Marine, and that’s something he won’t accept. He decides to offer this “librarian” the same buyout deal he had had with Charlie, deciding she wouldn’t be interested in the company anyway. But he soon learns that that’s not the case: “‘What I have come to realize lately, Joel,’ she continued with a burst of earnest intensity, ‘is that passion is exactly what's been missing in my life. It's missing in every area of my life. My career, my past, my future. Everything seems to have gotten into a rut. I want out.’ ‘Out. I see.’ ‘Lately I've begun to feel as though I'm sitting on the sidelines of my own life. Normally I'm a very goal-directed person, but I feel as though I've lost my way or something. I need to revitalize and redirect myself. Great-Uncle Charlie has given me the perfect opportunity to do just that, and I'm going to grab the chance. Thornquist Gear is going to change my life.’”
Letty then decides that Joel would make the perfect mentor for her. Letty’s father, Dr. Morgan Thornquist, a full professor in the Department of Philosophy and Logic at Ridgemore College, warns her that Joel isn’t like any other man she’s ever known, that he’s no ivory tower type, and he doesn’t deal in theory but in hard facts. He also doubted Joel had any sensitivity training, and that he doesn’t play the game by the book; he’s the kind of man that makes up his own rules. Morgan states, however, that it should prove “interesting”. Letty quickly learns this when she experiences Joel’s “Lesson 1: How to Avoid Unwanted Phone Calls”. Joel was direct, but undeniably effective.
The book was a nice balance between humour, suspense and romance, and I liked that the MMC appreciated the MFC’s other attributes, like an ankle, her intelligence or even her rumpled suits. It’s tedious to just read about characters’ more typical physical features, and their wants, “needs” and desires, and the fulfilling of these.
I loved the main characters, and the chemistry between them. The MFC, Leticia Thornquist was my favourite. She was brisk, organised, and entirely professional in all her business dealings, speaking clearly and distinctly, making her view clear to others. She was kind and fair at all times, and had a good overview and business head on her. She exhibited linguistic and intrapersonal/social intelligence, which Joel recognised and respected. I was, however, frustrated by her lack of action when it came to her ex-fiancé, the pompous and pontificating Dr. Philip Dixon, Associate Professor at the Department of Business Administration at Vellacott College. Letty had a great deal of patience, in this case, too much in my opinion.
In general, all the characters were well-rounded and developed, with all of the reasons behind their behaviour and actions divulged by the end. I can’t say I liked all the characters, however. Diana was the character I disliked the most, as she had simply waited to be rescued from her gilded cage. Although the reason for her behaviour was given, as I mentioned, at the end, I still feel it didn’t excuse her misleading and using people. I also had difficulty accepting Morgan and how much Letty relied on him. Understandable as it may be, considering Letty’s having lost her mother to breast cancer when she was eighteen, I feel that Morgan was emotionally unavailable to her: “She had known ahead of time exactly what Morgan would say. It was the same thing he had been saying since she was a child: ‘Make a decision matrix, Letty. Weigh all the crucial factors and enter them on a grid. The appropriate conclusion will be obvious.’” Also, for a man who professes to think logically, I fail to understand Morgan’s logic in leaving the three women unprotected to join Joel in his mission to deal with just one man on the loose.
I particularly enjoyed the humour in this book, for example, how Joel kept “forgetting” that Letty was from Indiana and mentioned some other town/city instead, and how she was always saying “I read an article about …” whenever she came across a problem that she needed to solve. Joel did not fail to notice this: “Ms. Thornquist probably did not approve of sex, anyway. She had undoubtedly read an article that detailed the myriad dangers involved these days.”
It is sad how many of these types of small towns like Echo Cove there are, that are reliant on just one company or industry for their economic well-being. And how many more there have been throughout history, leading to struggling or deserted towns. Often these could have been prevented, if the problems would have been addressed earlier but sadly it’s often just people’s neglect and lack of caring, or a sign of the times.
I thought the narrator, Amy McFadden, did an absolutely fantastic feat in bringing Jayne Ann Krentz’s characters to life, as I lost myself in their lives and the story.
The ending of the book was sweet.
My favourite quote: “A heavy silence hung over Joel's office after the door closed behind Diana. Letty waited uncomfortably for Joel to say something. When he did not, she smiled tentatively. ‘Joel, you're not really upset because I told Diana that Keith pounded you into the floor during that bar fight, are you?’ ‘Pounded me into the floor?’ Joel repeated softly. ‘It gets worse every time I hear the story.’ ‘Pounded, flattened, beat to a pulp, what does it matter? It was in a good cause. I was trying to shore up their relationship a little.’ ‘I take it you don't think my ego is a worthy cause?” Letty grinned. ‘I think your ego could sustain a direct hit from a nuclear warhead without getting badly damaged.’”