Taylor Chase is an air force special agent tasked with extracting brilliant scientist, Oscar Hayes, from a private island. It is suspected that he is being held there against his will by the reclusive billionaire who owns the island. If he is there by choice, Taylor has to take with her Dr. Mark Wolfson, who is conducting research into something known as remote influence. It's basically mind-reading. He's there in case they need to convince Oscar to leave the island. I think? Taylor and Mark have a past. She was his student and lover and he used her as one of his subjects without her consent.
If there's one thing my romance doesn't need, it's mind-reading! I've come across this a couple of times and I am honestly stumped as to how anyone could find it romantic or sexy! Being with someone who can read your mind whenever they want to is not romantic - it's creepy! It's invasive. It's more mind-rape than mind-reading. Even worse, the "hero" is not hero material at all. He's a predator! He was a university professor who began an affair with a student, used his powers to read her mind, and did it all without her consent or knowledge. Yuck, yuck, yuck, yuck, yuck! He should be in jail, or at least losing his tenure! He didn't improve from there. He kept reading Taylor's mind while on their mission despite her telling him not to. He teaches her a trick to block him. When he continues to read her mind and she berates him, he tells her that it's her own fault for not employing his blocking trick better! What the ever-loving fuck? If that's not a metaphor for victim blaming, I don't know what is!
The plot itself is a bit of a bore. It takes 100 pages for Taylor and Mark to even reach the island. From that point, it's mostly still all talk and no action. The climax is handled pretty well and mildly exciting, but the enjoyment from that quickly dissipates as the book carries on for another 20 pages and tries to throw in a black moment that literally only lasts a moment before Mark is forgiven for the fact that he has once again been using Taylor as a test subject all throughout the mission. But it's luuuurrrve, so it's okay, am I right?
Don't let anyone you know use remote influence to get you to read this trash.