A Rating of B
Is there such a thing as too much alpha-male? Well, I’ve finally come
across a book where I believe the male is really too alpha. I’ve really
given two weeks of thought to this story before sitting down and reading
this review and while the story is good, I really didn’t like the hero
much and I truly haven’t changed my opinion on that even after I
finished the story.
Yes, I read this book several years ago and all I can say is thank
heavens this wasn’t my first Jayne Anne Krentz, because if it had been,
I probably would never have read her again. This is an early Krentz and
while a lot of her style is there I have rarely come across a hero that
I found so hard to like.
Cole Stockton is definitely an alpha-male and he wants it all and he
wants Kelsey Murdock in his life. He plans to make her his mistress,
maybe even his wife but Kelsey knows nothing about him and he won’t tell
her about himself. That’s enough to drive any woman nuts! Kelsey is
going on vacation and in the meantime, has to drop some paperwork off on
an island in the Caribbean where a client is waiting for it. She’s
going alone but Cole has other plans. Of course, they run into trouble,
that’s to be expected and it’s up to Cole to get them out of this mess.
Now, I liked the story in-so-far as there was a great little mystery as
only Krentz can write and there was lots of push and shove between the
hero and heroine, jockeying for dominance position which Krentz writes
so well. Kelsey could give as good as she got. Cole was a man with
secrets; secrets he didn’t want to expose to his woman. Okay, I can buy
that but he was just too dominating. His demands that she tell him
everything and he would tell her nothing drove me nuts. I had many
people make comments on this being one of their favorite Krentz stories
but sorry, gang, in the end, I just couldn’t buy the 180° turn around in
Cole Stockton.
Yes, he was a wounded warrior, a man with secrets and a desire to
protect the woman he loved. However, his high demands of Kelsey (had I
been in her position, I would have told him to go to
hedoublehockeysticks in a hand basket and don’t bother to come back)
just didn’t endear him to me. He was pure male chauvinist pig and while
Krentz can write wonderful alpha-males that are highly chauvinistic,
Cole Stockton was just too much so for me.
Now, I can’t give this story a C or a D; it’s not in me to do that to a
good Krentz story and I did read it word for word right to the very
end. If you truly like an alpha-male who’s extreme, you’ll love this
story. For me, it’s one I’ll put back on the shelf and keep only
because it’s Krentz. I am giving this story a B because I did finish it
but it will never be a true keeper for me.