PENNY JORDAN
Stats
for my copy:
Mass market paperback, Harlequin Books, 1983.
How
acquired:
Who knows. I registered it on BookCrossing in 2003 after retrieving
some boxes of books that my husband had put in the attic when we
moved into our house some seven or eight years previously.
First
line:
'Saffron, my dear, you look wonderful – so like your mother!'
So
despite the kidnapping, and the ruthless way he treated her while she
was held captive, I knew Nico was the hero. No other man is mentioned
in the synopsis on the back cover. So he had to be. But I just
couldn't see how. For the entire book I just couldn't figure out he
could possibly redeem himself and not end up in jail. Because
obviously if he repented for his deeds and went to jail in the end,
there wouldn't be an HEA. Unless the book jumped forward to his
release. But that just didn't seem plausible. If one of the other men
had lured her to the remote area where she was kidnapped, then I
could easily assume right off the bat that Nico was working with the
kidnappers in an undercover capacity. Perfectly plausible. But he
engineered the kidnapping.
Of
course it all works out in the end. But after learning the truth, the
whole truth, I was outraged on Saffron's behalf. Outraged that her
father had allowed Nico to kidnap her. Outraged that Saffron seemed
to harbor no anger at her father for allowing her to be put in that
situation. In my head I wrote an epilogue in which, after the initial
joy of being reunited with Nico and learning he was actually one of
the good guys had worn off, Saffron would vent her anger on both Nico
and her father. Oh, she'd still marry Nico, of course. But she would
hold their actions over both their heads for awhile and make them
both grovel for her forgiveness.
Whew.
Ok. Now that I got that out of the way. I read the majority for this
book in one day. I liked Saffron. She was strong. She was frightened
but defiant. She was attracted to Nico and hated him for it. She was
shrewd in her observations of Olivia, the female kidnapper who was
jealous of her and the hold she seemed to have over Nico. And of
course I liked Nico as well. I mean, I knew the anger he often took
out on Saffron wasn't out of meanness, it was for show around the
other members of the gang, and it was his own defense against the
feelings he felt for her.
Ugh.
I'm not a hundred percent sure I even liked the book. No, that's a
lie. I did like it. But I'm not proud of that.