A spitfire wife of a recently slain mob boss was much more than FBI agent Dan Maddox had bargained for when he signed on to protect Carlotta Papparelli. After turning state's evidence, Carlie was at the top of the mob's hit list, and it was up to Dan to keep her alive long enough to testify. From the streets of Philly to the sun-drenched Florida coast, Dan and Carlie were running for their lives, and only their faith in each other—and the Lord—would keep them safe….
Ginny Aiken, a former newspaper reporter, lives in Pennsylvania with her husband and their three younger sons--the oldest is married, has flown the coop, and made her a doting grandmother. Born in Havana, Cuba, and raised in Valencia and Caracas Venezuela, Ginny discovered books at an early age. She wrote her first novel at age fifteen while she trained with the Ballets de Caracas, later to be known as the Venezuelan National Ballet. She burned that tome when she turned a "mature" sixteen. An ecletic list of jobs--including stints as reporter, paralegal, choreographer, language teacher, retail salesperson, wife, mother of four boys, and herder of their numerous and assorted friends, including the 135 members of first the Crossmen and then the Bluecoats Drum & Bugle Corps--brought her back to books in search of her sanity. She is now the author of twenty-seven published works, but she hasn't caught up with that elusive sanity yet.
This was a quick read, not the best romantic tale I've ever read but it kept my attention & I preferred it to "Mixed up with the Mob." I have to say I did snigger while reading the "hair" episode, it reminded me of something that once happened to me... On the whole, a nice easy romantic read with a sweet ending.
Dan is still on the case keeping Carlie safe in order for her to testify against her father, brother and some of their associates. But when it seems like the bad guys know every move they make, his partner J.Z. is even more convinced that there is a mole in the office. Is the mole working for the mob or for themselves?
I hate to say this but I knew who the mole was from the first time it was mentioned. It was kind of obvious to me. And I had figured out where I thought the money was too. Even though I figured out those things, this last book in the series was a good read.
"Married to the Mob" was very good. It made me wonder what the other two books in the series are like. One of the people who read it say he/she hated the main character. I never hated Dan or Carlie. I just didn't understand the sudden transformation that Dan made in the book. It seemed kind of sudden.