Reader Reviews

 
image WHIRLWIND COURTSHIP
BY JAYNE TAYLOR, 1980
CONTEMPORARY ROMANCE
LOVESPELL
Currently out of print

Reviewed by: Anna Budziak

Many a woman has had to deal with the male ego but few have had as tough a go of it as Phoebe Hampton in Jayne Taylor's WHIRLWIND COURTSHIP. After enduring a kidnapping by two possible rapists, a night spent on a mountain while escaping, and a brush with poison ivy, Phoebe hopes she has found refuge when she comes to Harlan Garand's mountain cabin. What she finds is an angry Harlan who accuses her of trying to entrap him in marriage. A belief that neither Phoebe's protestations or her acceptance by Harlans's dog, Jinx, can overcome.

But Phoebe is not a successful business woman for nothing and she convinces Harlan to give her shelter and keeps Harlan, figuratively if not literally, at arms length. Yet it is only when Harlan captures one of her kidnappers that he shamefacedly acknowledges the truth. Then begins the bigger battle as Phoebe must contend with a Harlan who is prepared to protect her from the remaining kidnapper and is determined to marry her.

Like the title, the story is a whirlwind of good humor. Some people may object to the way Phoebe seems to go along with Harlan's high handedness. I view her actions as an attempt to fight her own attraction to Harlan, and his roughshod methods as a disguise to cover his fear that he might not win her. Despite a lack of complex plot and full-rounded characters, you will be caught up in the reversals of romantic conventions: the tall, dark and handsome hero who turns out to be the average sized, red-headed type who offers fish to be skinned instead of candy and flowers, and a heroine who is more rounded than fashionable and whose dependable front hides a wild romantic. Add to this the animal antics of Jinx and Ferd the Bird and you can't help but be entertained by WHIRLWIND COURTSHIP.

Anna Budziak


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