"Shining examples of the author's style and humor!"
MaryJanice Davidson, one of my favorite authors, is most
known for her shapeshifter stories. This collection of
three novellas (two of them interrelated) is a straight
contemporary, but still plenty of fun and reflecting a lot
of trademark MJ touches. Sweet Strangers Renee had been, until two days ago, head of security at
Anodyne, a biotech research firm owned by the slimy
Nicholas Jekell, referred to as "The Jackal". She's now on
the run, accused of stealing a vial of a secret new
experimental drug. The police are after her, Anodyne's own
nasty security forces are after her--and she just happens
to jump into an elevator with Eric Axelrod, former National
Security Agency employee and very recently a freelance
private eye. Grabbing Renee and recovering the stolen vial
could launch his new career. But he's also willing to
listen to her side of the story. Renee just isn't willing
to trust him--she'll steal his wallet, jump out of the
hotel window, and try everything else to escape him. It's
only when she realizes that he's not in cahoots with
Anodyne and that there is something very seriously
underhanded going on at the company that she is willing to
cooperate with him. Of course, they've already "cooperated"
quite well in that hotel room bed . . . Renee is another of Ms. Davidson's entertaining and
admirable kick-ass heroines. She's smart, feisty, and
determined, and not about to back down to anyone. The
tricks she pulls on Eric, and her rather bewildered
reaction to realizing how much she was attracted to him,
had me laughing out loud. The revelations about the
shenanigans going on with the new miracle drug make a
realistic story and reveal unexpected depths in the
characters. Lovely Lies Lori has been hiding out for the past year, ever since her
mother died and left her a fortune. She knows her really
nasty and evil stepfather and stepbrother want that money
for themselves and are willing to behave in underhanded and
illegal ways to get control of her and her money. Lucy has
seen how the family wealth made her mother miserable, so
she decides she wants nothing to do with it and plans to
give it all away to good causes. But she wants to visit and
investigate those charities personally before handing over
the money, and she needs someone to protect her while she
does that. So she hires the cynical and street-smart Peter
Random. He's not really interested in being a bodyguard,
especially for a woman he found passed out drunk in the
backseat of his car, but he needs a job and this one seems
easy. Although the Anodyne situation from the first story is
briefly mentioned in this one, the plots of the two stories
are not related. Peter was a secondary character in
Sweet Strangers--a bad-guy accomplice of The Jackal;
the Peter in this story may have the same name but is a
totally different personality. I found this the weakest of the three stories. Peter was an
enticing hero, but it was annoying to have so many mentions
of his mysterious background, and then have many of them
left unresolved or unrevealed by the end. Lori was a
disappointing heroine--rather wimpy and not overly bright.
I found the plot weak--there was actually no real threat
from the "villains", since they had no legal hold over Lori
and no way to steal her money. She had the support of her
mother's lawyer, and if she'd been halfway sensible and
shown a little backbone, she wouldn't have needed to hide
out for a year or to hire Peter. There were several
unrealistic and not-quite-believable points to the
storyline that kept throwing me out of the action. If you
can temporarily turn off your common sense, this story can
be a pleasant and undemanding sweet romantic read. Delightful Deception This story brings back the brilliant and driven Dr. Thea
Foster, MD, PhD, MBBS, PharmD--medical researcher at
Anodyne
and the person who invented the miracle drug from Sweet
Strangers. The Jackal is now gone and Anodyne has a new
CEO. Wunderkind Jimmy Scrye is young, incredibly wealthy, a
genius who rescues ailing biotech firms, and a total kook.
The Boy Wonder looks like a grown-up Opie, is in constant
hyper motion, has decorated his executive office like
Toyland--and he wants Thea to come up with another
brilliant medical discovery post-haste. Thea is stunned and
confused not only by her new boss, but by the overwhelming
sexual fantasies she's having about him. He isn't her type
at all AND he's younger than her; how can she be thinking
this way? But she understands his motivation for the
research he orders her to do--or at least she thinks she
does, until she decides Jimmy is using her infatuation with
him to get what he wants, both in and out of bed. The dialogue in this story was even funnier than in the
first one! Whether it's Jimmy talking to Thea, or Thea
talking to herself, you'll be howling at the conversations.
These two brilliant and over-educated people are totally
inexperienced and unskilled at real-life relationships, and
they fumble their way through how to manage their
attraction to each other. Definitely read this book for Renee's and Thea's stories,
shining examples of MaryJanice Davidson's style and humor.
Reviewed by Raelene Gorlinsky
Courtesy Sensual Romance
Posted September 23, 2003
Summary"Sweet Strangers"
Renee Jardin never meant to become the
world's most sought-after thief. But the minute she walks
out of her biotech firm accidentally carrying "The Cure"—
the most important scientific discovery of the century—
she's on the run from ruthless bioengineers, cops, and the
U.S. government. Desperate to lose her trackers, Renee
lays a full-body kiss on the first gorgeous guy she sees...a
kiss that she gets back with a toe-curling vengeance.
N.S.A. agent James Axelrod never thought apprehending his
suspect would be so easy, and so sinfully arousing...or that
he would consider taking her into custody in the privacy
of his own bedroom...
"Lovely Lies"
Peter Random lost everything when he was outwitted by that
goody-goody Renee Jardin. Late in his rent, his job gone,
Peter vows he'll never let anyone get close enough to burn
him again. So why can't he seem to tell Lori Jamieson and
her troubles to hit the road? It isn't just her hot bod
and full lips—although those have a magic he can't deny.
Something about the damsel in distress makes Peter want to
wrap her in his strong arms and prove that a bad boy can
be very, very good, especially when it's between the
sheets...
"Delightful Deception"
At the biotech firm, they call her Thea "I.Q." Foster—
"I.Q." for either Intelligence Quotient or Ice Queen,
depending. Slipping the Cure into Renee's tote bag was
satisfying revenge, but now that the fun's over, Thea sets
her sights on a new challenge: sarcastic, secretive Jimmy
Scrye. Cracking open his hard shell would be a real game,
but Jimmy's more than Thea's match. He's got a few ideas
for turning the tables on the brainy scientist...sensual,
erotic fantasy ideas that just might change those letters
in her name to "Incredible," "Insatiable," and "Quivering
with delight"...
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