"Amusing, whimsical, and entertaining contemporary romance"
This is a amusing, whimsical, and entertaining story; I
recommend this for anyone who likes sizzling and humorous
contemporary romances. It had, perhaps, a few rough spots
in the wonderfully descriptive writing style, but was much,
much better than I normally expect from a debut novel. The
characters are lively and likable with plenty of unique
personality, the dialogue is hilarious, and the plot action
(although it bordered on slapstick at a few points) kept me
chuckling and unable to put the book down until I got to
the HEA and delicious epilogue. Cecy Scatterton's life is a mess. Her adored brother and
only relative died six months ago. Caring for him in his
final illness had taken up all her time and attention. His
death left her depressed, alone, and disconnected from
life. So with what seemed like a small fortune from his
life insurance, she filled up her empty life and apartment
with "things" -- expensive knick-knacks, designer clothes,
gourmet foods. She occupied her time with shopping and with
ordering from all those catalogues. Besides her cat, her
most significant relationship was with the UPS delivery
man. Then the final medical bills came in and the insurance
money was gone and the bills for all that stuff she ordered
kept arriving. Cecy had to drag herself back to reality --
she had no job, her checking account was empty, her car and
furniture were repossessed, she was being evicted from her
apartment, the kitchen was empty of food, and she was
reduced to digging in the sofa cushions for loose change
for lunch money. The final straw comes when Cecy trips over a pile of
catalogues while answering the door to the UPS man and ends
up in the emergency room—where she can't pay the bill
because she has no cash and all her credit cards are maxed
out. Chas Buchanan, gorgeous but staid financial
consultant, is in the ER with a broken finger. He doesn't
know why he feels compelled to help out this woman he
assumes to be a beautiful but ditzy airhead, but he covers
her bill and she agrees to pay him back by filling in for
his vacationing secretary. Chas soon realizes there's more
inside Cecy's head than he assumed -- her master's degree
in French literature isn't very practical for job hunting,
but it took intelligence and determination to earn. She
asks inciteful questions about his business, works hard,
and tries to get her life back under control while hiding
her disastrous circumstances from him. He has to admire her
honesty and guts when he finds out she paid off a bounced
check at her hairdresser by working as the shampoo girl
there and when he sees her holding a garage sale of her
knick-knacks and remaining possessions. He is remarkably
accepting and helpful of the financial and practical mess
Cecy has made of her life. But he does feel it's a little
over the top when Cecy solves her homelessness problem by
secretly living in his office -- especially since Chas
discovers this when he comes back to the office late one
night and she, thinking him a burglar, knocks him
unconscious with his antique abacus. Cecy and Chas fight their attraction to each other. He was
badly burned by his manipulative and greedy ex-wife, and
thinks Cecy is probably looking for a sugar daddy to take
care of her. She sees the differences in their attitudes
and lifestyles and feels they could never make a
relationship work. However, that doesn't stop them from
lusting after each other, especially once Chas solves her
housing problem by offering her the temporary use of a
spare bedroom in his house. They advance and retreat in an
emotional dance as they discover more about each other's
backgrounds and personalities and add liking and respect to
their attraction. Cecy is determined to learn to take care
of herself rather than depend on Chas, but Chas can't get
past the feeling that she is using him for security and
that she just won't fit in his well-planned life. Cecy also
needs to figure out just what she wants to do with her life
and how to get there. There were a lot of fun aspects of this story: Cecy's cat
plays a big role, there is the possible ghost of Chas's
grandmother, Chas's fixation with owning the house of his
late grandparents, Cecy's hairdresser friends, Chas's old
college friend who has come out of the closet with a
vengeance, the client who thinks Cecy is a prostitute
masquerading as a nun (don't ask), the French college
professor and his wife . . . All that helped keep things
very interesting and active. I loved the characters in this book. They were very real
people. Cecy was the best part of the book. She was
original and refreshing. Her responses were sometimes
unique, but never incompetent or stupid. You only think
she's "ditzy" at the very beginning -- then the reader
begins to see the real Cecy, just as Chas does. I admired
Cecy's honesty, quick wits and quicker mouth, and her
commitment and determination to support herself and
overcome her past. Chas was a hunk and a great guy. I was initially afraid
that he would be one of those super-alpha heros who knows
what's best for the little lady and takes control of her
and her life, fixing all the problems for the helpless
wimp. But he wasn't like that at all. He helped Cecy, but
she paid him back, and he never tried to control her
decisions. The weakest part of the story was Chas's
fixation with thinking Cecy wanted a sugar daddy. That
obnoxious conviction just wasn't supported by Cecy's
behavior or character. The author used it to create the
conflict, but I wish she'd found some other plot device. My only other complaint with the book was the sex scenes.
Yes, they were plenty hot and the double entendres and
salacious conversation were hysterical. But some of the
analogies (in shades of passionate purple) were a little
odd: "her legs spread like a fever"; "hungry jelly with
nubbins of need" (never heard nipples described that way
before); "carousel horses, sliding up and down their
poles"; "cake icing squeezed out of a fat tube"(what's that
one supposed to mean??). And I realize the author was being
deliberately lusty and earthy, contrasting Chas's calm and
controlled business life with his overwhelming desire for
Cecy, but the transitions both into and out of the intimate
action were far too abrupt -- a little more development
would have been nice and made the characters' motivation
clearer.
Reviewed by Raelene Gorlinsky
Posted February 2, 2002
|