by Danielle Steel ‧ RELEASE DATE: Dec. 1, 1996
A love story of sorts, yes, but Steel's 38th (Malice, p. 328, etc.)—a no glitz, no glamour, color-by-the-numbers historical tract set mostly in the '40s—will have die-hard fans asking: Where's the Steel? When Japanese Masao Takashimaya meets his arranged bride, Hidemi, it's love at first sight. Though he's an ultramodern professor who wants his children to learn English and she's a fierce traditionalist who wants nothing more than to bear Masao a son, their marriage of convenience quickly transforms itself into a bona fide love match. Hidemi is ashamed, but Masao delighted, when their first child turns out to be a girl. And when their daughter Hiroko turns 18, her father—against her mother's wishes- -sends her to California for what is meant to be just one year of college. She goes to live with her father's cousin ``Tak,'' his Japanese-American wife, and their three American-born children. Tak, a highly-respected political science professor at Stanford, has lived in America for 20 years. Meanwhile, Tak's assistant, Peter, who is white, falls head-over-heels in love with the painfully shy Hiroko as soon as he meets her; and with Peter, Hiroko finally blooms, beginning to feel at home in a land that had previously seemed inconceivably foreign. Then WW II breaks out, Pearl Harbor is bombed, and Hiroko and the Takashimayas are sent to internment camps, along with thousands of other Japanese-American citizens. Peter goes off to war, as does Tak's son Ken, but through the hellish years that follow (and the loss of several principal characters), Hiroko's love for Peter never wanes. In the one concession to Steelism, in spite of insurmountable odds and considerable tragedy, a sappy end is tacked on with unabashed tugs at the heartstrings. History on the light side in the telling, though well researched and solid in its basis. If prosaic and simple, a glimpse nonetheless into a shameful episode in American history.
Pub Date: Dec. 1, 1996
ISBN: 0-385-31301-2
Page Count: 360
Publisher: Delacorte
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 1996
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by Stephanie Laurens ‧ RELEASE DATE: Feb. 24, 2015
A fun and fast-moving read, and better edited than many of Laurens’ past efforts. Highly recommended.
A straight-laced Glasgow businessman is drawn back into clan politics and a romance with a woman from a neighboring estate.
Laurens (By Winter’s Light, 2014, etc.) returns to her popular Cynster series with this romantic mystery set in mid-19th-century Scotland. Thomas Carrick is looking for “the right sort of wife for a gentleman of the type he intended to become—a pillar of the wealthy business community.” But a plea for help from farmers on his uncle’s estate causes him to abandon Glasgow suddenly. His wastrel cousins are taking advantage of their father the laird’s lingering illness to plunder the clan’s coffers. Thomas is determined to set things right, even though it means encountering the witchy woman on the next estate, Lucilla Cynster, who has held him in thrall for many years. Lucilla, on the other hand, has been waiting for Thomas to figure out that a marriage between them has been preordained by the Lady, a local deity embodied by Lucilla’s mother. She believes Thomas is her consort, chosen by the Lady to be the future caretaker of Lucilla and her people. Together, they work to solve the mystery of recent foul deeds on Carrick land and have fabulous sex around the edges. The book falls prey to the annoying tics common in Laurens’ prose (can you really sigh inwardly, catch your mental breath, mentally blink or rock back on your mental heels?) but is a fairly successful example of cross-genre experiments in which classic mystery and historical romance and even fantasy tropes are combined. The solution to the mystery is wonderfully unpredictable, and both Thomas and Lucilla are flawed and likable characters.
A fun and fast-moving read, and better edited than many of Laurens’ past efforts. Highly recommended.Pub Date: Feb. 24, 2015
ISBN: 978-0-7783-1782-1
Page Count: 384
Publisher: Harlequin MIRA
Review Posted Online: Dec. 21, 2014
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2015
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by Amanda Bouchet ‧ RELEASE DATE: April 28, 2020
Another brilliant odyssey from Bouchet.
Tess Bailey and her crew agree to a rescue mission which is practically suicidal, but as they prepare, she discovers deep secrets about her past that may give her and her rebel allies more leverage in their battle for freedom from the Galactic Overseer, though at great cost.
Nightchaser Tess Bailey, her ship, Endeavor, and her rebel crew—which now includes her lover, Shade Ganavan, until recently a Dark Watch bounty hunter—have been given the task of freeing Reena Ahern, a scientist who could save Demeter Terre, a planet that was poisoned by the Galactic Overseer when it stood up to him, killing 90% of its population. Unfortunately, Reena is imprisoned on Starbase 12, “the most secure place in the known universe.” First, though, Tess and Shade have a meeting with her uncle, Nathaniel Bridgebane, second-in-command to the Overseer, during which Tess realizes her uncle is likely an ally. They also meet his lieutenant, Sanaa Mwende, who joins their crew and helps Tess get a clearer picture of the dangerous game her uncle has played all these years. As the crew prepares for their rescue mission, Tess' first love reappears; then the crew agrees to a smaller job liberating some food supplies during a Dark Watch personnel switch and wind up rescuing hundreds of people the Overseer captured for their superblood—which, like Tess', is impervious to disease and heals extremely quickly. The stakes rise as people across the galaxy are about to be tagged and tracked, all in order to find the blood that will be used to create an army of supersoldiers, annihilating any possible rebellion. Help for their mission also leads to more secrets regarding Tess’ past being revealed, setting up more hope and more danger for the next book in the series. The Nightchaser space opera continues with tons of action, romance, pathos, and fascinating worldbuilding.
Another brilliant odyssey from Bouchet.Pub Date: April 28, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-4926-6716-2
Page Count: 448
Publisher: Sourcebooks Casablanca
Review Posted Online: Jan. 25, 2020
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2020
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