I read the third book in the series, and with some really upsetting OW drama, I went into this trying to prepare for the worst.
It was really interesting to me that the hero went across mountains that were traveled by Alexander the Great, Genghis Khan, and Marco Polo.
This author is extremely unsafe. 2/2 books by her and they have the same shit in it. They're at a party and he clearly wants Julianne. A redhead comes up to him and he doesn't get with her because 'she was the wrong woman.'
We get a heroine who spends time at her pregnant sisters and husband's place watching old movies--lame btw--and a hero who's playing bodyguard to some stupid pop star who keeps throwing herself at him, walking around topless in her underwear and taking her towel off for him. He has to pop Tums on the job and is constantly grinding his teeth it's just a challenge to resist. When he turns her down she has a tantrum then just accepts it and kisses him on the mouth after, saying she reminds him of his dad. Because, you know, that's not weird or anything.
Then he's on a random plane which has trouble landing, happens to randomly hit his head on a purse buckle of the passenger beside him, and needs stitches. What a freak thing. So he meets a female doctor. Go figure.
Wow this reminded me of book 3. He's out on a date fully wanting to hook up with her. And only doesn't because he's called on a mission. Screw this shit.
In one scene Dallas was written as Quinn which was really confusing for a second.
'"It figured," Quinn said.
"What?" she asked as he bartender lined up a row of glasses, then filled them nearly to the top from cans of Red Bull.'
It felt very unlikely that Dallas would be assigned to the investigation in the first place. Especially when she surmises he was brought on for his charm. Even he said he's never been on a carrier.
A characters dialogue and actions were broken up on different lines, which could be confusing.
I found the writing to be factual, lots of military lingo and references I didn't understand at times. The book was all business almost all of the time. Every conversation and action revolved around their mission, leaving very little time for anything else. The conversations were a little rambling, with people going on and on explaining stuff.
The characters would have internal thoughts right during a conversation.
Sometimes the writing was a little old-fashioned with "I've not" or "I've no doubt."
And using the word diddle for had sex.
I'm wondering if this series covers any heroines who aren't, or don't have a connection to the military. It seems their professions are always similar. It would be nice to see one of the guys with a regular civilian. Book 3 she was a doctor in the military, in this one she was a navy brat and was a lawyer in the navy.
I think he hasn't gotten with anyone since meeting Julianne, which would have been a miracle, and he just casually throws out to us that he dated a Carolina panthers cheerleader with fake boobs.
Why is it always the hero who recalls women from their past? Women with big boobs, skillful tongues, who were agile in bed, etc. but heroines never recall men from their past in a sexual way? Or rarely recall them at all? I've read hundreds of romance books and you never hear heroines make a reference to a guy from their past with a big penis, or who were skilled in some way in the bedroom. Why is that?
I used to like the ol sleeping in the same bed, wake up wrapped around each other thing, but no more. It's just unrealistic. Especially here, where it's taken a step further. They both end up having the same dream-super unrealistic-on a private beach,& they end up almost doing it.
In his service record it said he didn't have any STDs,& that the "pop star coyly hinted about there being something going on between the two of you." Julianne says she knows they didn't hook up "because you might have a reputation for being a player. But you're a stand-up guy. You're not going to screw around on the job." Which they didn't. But he'd been tempted. So he's not as stand-up as you think. Also, now that I think on it, he screwed around on this job. But I guess it's ok, because it's with the heroine.
Every woman in the book comes onto Dallas. He's everyone's type, apparently. The female aviator who undressed in front of them and even a random woman coming back from taking a shower is attracted to Dallas. Come on.
The heroine, despite thinking herself plain, is actually hot. Yet no one hits on her. I wanted that to even things out and to make Dallas jealous.
He's one of those heroes who tell the heroine they're going to make love, which I don't like, because it feels like the heroine gives in and the demanding hero gets his way.
I thought it was sweet, though unrealistic, when he said he'd traveled the world, scuba dived, climbed mountains and seen migrating monarch butterflies but had never been more entranced by a natural wonder than seeing Julianne blush.
It was funny when Dallas said A Few Good Men wasn't realistic cause Cruise wasn't attracted to Demi's character. That was disappointing that it didn't have any romance in it...His theory was the role was originally written for a guy, but they added Demi cause she was a box-office draw.
In the scene where they're interrogating the religious counselor, the guy suddenly stands up when I didn't know he ever sat down.
They were questioning him at a table, then Julianne stands up& somehow Dallas lowers his head to her. When had he stood up?
The MCs went from having nothing in common to having the same thoughts. He said she was wrapped around him like a python,& she used the same term. She thought the religious guy looked like Ichabod Crane and he says the same thing.
The book took a weird turn with the pagan/witch stuff. The doctor turns out to be a witch, thinking the moon is his guardian angel, calling it Her and being psychic. Okay...
I didn't even notice the lack of intimacy until I was getting close to 80%. And wish it hadn't taken so long in the book. Although they had only been together a couple days, so it's not like it was dragged out on the time frame, but it was still really late in a book for that.
While on the boat, it was confusing keeping track of the captain, the LSO, the doctor, the CDO, the admiral and other captain. At times I had no idea who was speaking.
It was cute how in the killers POV he referenced Dallas as 'her omnipresent guard dog' and 'he'd seen the way the flyboy looked at her. If anything happened to the former JAG officer, he'd turn relentless, not giving up until he'd gotten his man.'
The parts in that POV told us nothing. No clues whatsoever. So it wasn't really necessary.
It took 308 pages to mention anything about Julianne's sexual experience, while we've heard of the heroes the whole book. I honestly expected her to be a virgin. She says she's experienced, like a typical 30-something year old woman. But that it had been too long since she'd had a mans hands on her.
No details. No names, not a ballpark figure, no stories of a man kissing or having sex with her. Or any past dates. But the heroes always brag and reminisce of theirs. Which is complete crap, by the way.
It wasn't until page 309 that they finally have sex. That's 81% in, which is really long for a romance book. And it didn't even last one page. Are you kidding me?
I hated Julianne's sister was dragged into this. Like Kirby's friend being taken in book 3. They had enough going on. And the sister irritated me anyway, what with referencing her unborn kids as tadpoles,& how they'd cartwheel their way to the fast food place.
The hero gives worn out, unbelievable lines like he'd never wanted or needed another woman like he does her.
She doesn't normally have casual sex, despite being experienced. And despite having the experience of a 'typical 30 something' she'd never considered using the word love for any other man. How is that possible? And she loves him after a mere few days, which I can't stand in books.
'Love? The word, which she'd never even considered toward any other man, reeled in her head. It was a word she suspected they'd both always avoided. A word that had been continuing to grow between them for far longer than the past two days, until it was no longer deniable.'
She'd thought about him and dreamed about him often after the court martial, and compared every man she'd met since to him and they came up short. You didn't even know him them!! You were interrogating him across a table! How could you possibly love him and compare other guys to him?!
Her sister didn't seem remotely scared to have been kidnapped and drugged. And of course admired her sisters strength while Julianne had been jealous of her looks.
Even more ridiculous when the psychic witch doctor dreams about Julianne's sister being in danger, whom he's never seen!
But of course the tadpole reference stood out for the psychic because it's a really unique thing to call your kids.
I didn't like the parts in other characters POVs, like Dana Murphy, the bad guy and her sister.
It was cute how both sisters swore off getting involved with military men and ended up with them.
Although I resented the fact that her sister was used as the drama in the end, and which meant they had to leave their investigation on the ship behind, I was glad to see her husband Tom spring into action, although it was barely there. He needed more dialogue and the scene needed to be longer. Him rescuing his pregnant wife could have been a lot more emotional, because it wasn't really emotional at all.
I mentally sighed when her water broke right after. Way to make things completely corny.
We get a wrap-up of the bad guys, and I was so confused keeping up their titles and names I couldn't remember who was who. I even thought one of the men was her godfather, I was so confused. I had to go back and see who her godfather was. I was so glad he wasn't involved! So Ramsay got Lieutenant Murphy pregnant. And Wright killed her. And he started the rumors that Murphy and the LSO has an affair, not knowing he was gay. The captain was in love and didn't want her to have an abortion apparently. So before he could do something to blow his promotion, and ruin their chances of climbing the ladder, Wright killed them and arranged Merry's kidnapping, and the NCIS guy was involved in the kidnapping. It was a lot.
For all the time the case took up in the entire book, we don't even get to see the men arrested or anything. It's very hastily tied up, and off-page at that.
Merry naming the twins Dallas and Jules was too much. Pretty dang corny.
The ending could have been better. I was so looking forward to Dallas telling his friends he's with Julianne, the woman who almost had them court-martialed...and to see their reactions.
They didn't even say they loved each other, which is a big fail in a romance book. Julianne told readers she did but Dallas didn't.
It felt way too sudden for her to be ok if she got pregnant with his kid, when they've only known each other a few days, not counting the few days she interrogated him. Although I liked his response, "you humble me." Considering he never wanted to do to a kid what his dad did to him, which was abandon him.
Being that this is the last book in the series it needed a way bigger and better wrap up, with all the characters. I'm really disappointed in the ending. There was a sneak peek for Ricochet, which I found out was intended to be book 5, but her publisher wanted it as part of another series. That explains why there wasn't a wrap-up here.
I will say, this author either really knows a lot about the military or does a lot of research for her books. She's very knowledgeable about all the branches of the military, and it's very evident. On the same hand, it's almost too much military, to the point where you don't understand what's being said, and all the acronyms and terms they use.
This plot wasn't that good. I don't remember how I felt about book 3's plot, but I think I liked that one better. Probably because I didn't like the actual case they were on here. I didn't like the subject matter & the whole thing revolved around that case. All those people being killed or killing themselves.
Also this was hella confusing at times. Too many terms and lingo I didn't know, and too many characters. It would say captain or admiral without naming them and you had no idea who they were talking about.
Every conversation, every moment revolved around the case. I also dl books with really short time frames, like a few days. This was a cross between A Few Good Men, which was mentioned in the book, and also Top Gun, which was also mentioned.
The book was so serious, but then had some real ridiculous, unrealistic and corny elements at times.
Although book 3 had more OW crap, and this had less, I think I enjoyed that one more. I do think I like Dallas better, though, just going off memory. Both got 2 stars from me, though.