Reader Reviews

 
image A PASSIONATE BUSINESS
BY STEPHANIE JAMES, 1981
CATEGORY ROMANCE
SILHOUETTE ROMANCE #89
Currently out of print

Reviewed by: Danyelle Warden

Hilary Forrester resents her father’s ploy to buy her a suitable husband with the family’s chain of restaurants. Hilary takes a proactive stance and approaches candidate number four, Logan Saber. Logan is amused and intrigued when Hilary introduces herself to his secretary as the future Mrs. Logan Saber, and he determines that Hilary would fill that role nicely. Hilary is convinced that she cannot be happy with Logan, but even in her adamant resolve to resist his charms, Hilary is drawn to the enigmatic businessman. The pair experience several trials to their growing passion, most notably, Hilary’s devised schemes to thwart Logan’s attempt at courting her.

This book is typical Silhouette Romance – very little sex and plenty of emotional strife. However, it also has JAK’s trademark theme of trust and integrity underlying the predictable motives of the characters.

When read in the current climate, this book’s alpha hero is not particularly likable. The book as a whole is quite dated in many respects. The alpha hero represents everything romance readers believe they’ve grown beyond but still enjoy once in while, anyway. A heroine who has hidden depths but is reluctant to upset her father and stand completely independent of his wishes. Plenty of inter-related misunderstanding between the h/h which advance the plot while remaining predictable. And, the corporate setting in which the heroine has to struggle valiantly to succeed within while retaining her utter femininity.

I recall reading this book in the mid-80s and enjoying it; but now, the book simply serves as a historical marker in JAK’s remarkable journey through romantic fiction. This mile-marker represents the only Silhouette Romance title JAK produced. As an example of the timeframe in which it was written, A Passionate Business is a wonderful book. As a model of romance fiction’s evolution, APB is average to mediocre with a tendency to bore readers expecting a more sophisticated representation of romantic fiction.

Danyelle Warden

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