by Julie Hilden ‧ RELEASE DATE: Aug. 5, 2003
A powerfully sexy, moody scenario.
A woman never quite all there loses herself even more completely in a dominating marriage.
In her memoir, The Bad Daughter (1998), Hilden dealt similarly with a disassociated protagonist, and now, in a first novel, manages to write about a bad marriage with a controlling husband (boring) who has a thing for S/M (more boring) and for talking his wife into threesomes (deadly boring) without falling prey to the pitfalls of excess in one direction or another that often accompany this kind of story. Narrator Maya has slept with only two men before she meets Ilan in college and undergoes her sexual awakening under his able and ardent hands. Neither of the two seems terribly motivated toward a career, but, fortunately, Ilan’s father not only works at a magazine where he finds them internships but lets them live in a gorgeous Tribeca loft he owns. Soon, the writing all day and having sex every night doesn’t seem to be doing it for Ilan, who exercises a powerful control over the distant and sedate Maya (in one episode she resorts to liposuction in order to fit into his mother’s old dress for their wedding). The two take out an ad for a sexual third, and it goes without saying that the resulting encounters will all go just as Ilan scripts them—to arouse Maya’s deep need to be controlled. Things progress to blindfolds and razor cuts as the pair explores every last possible angle of their erotic connections. At the same time that Maya is following every order in bed, she is becoming by far the more successful writer of the two, growing into a highly sought-after celebrity interviewer famous for her near-psychic ability to find out the interviewee’s deepest secrets. When tragedy intervenes, it’s no surprise but shocking nevertheless—testament to Hilden’s rather uncanny abilities. With a cool, clear detachment in highly burnished, efficient prose, the story manages to be sensual without losing its head, and psychological without wasting too much time navel-gazing.
A powerfully sexy, moody scenario.Pub Date: Aug. 5, 2003
ISBN: 0-452-28443-0
Page Count: 224
Publisher: Plume
Review Posted Online: June 24, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2003
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by Julie Hilden
by Fern Michaels ‧ RELEASE DATE: Dec. 30, 2003
Michaels’s cluttered style has been noticeably trimmed this time around, which keeps the over-the-top plot moving right...
Good brother, bad brother.
It’s 1984: Rick, a wild young Hollywood star and all-around stud, is boozing heavily and secretly doing drugs—but he’s been warned. His controlling, money-mad, hyper-responsible older brother Philly isn’t going to bail him out next time, or square things with that dated entity referred to only as “the studio.” Skip to 1999: Rick’s sobered up and he’s still going strong. “He had a tinge of gray at his temples these days, but the studio expertly covered it up.” (The prolific Michaels may have been too busy churning out bestsellers to notice that studios haven’t kept actors under contract for decades, but never mind.) Rick skips the dye job, however, when Philly dies in an accident and leaves most of his estate to his ne’er-do-well brother, who gives up acting and takes over the resorts-for-the-rich that Philly was developing, though Roxy, Philly’s trashy wife, resents him for it. Ditto Reba, Roxy’s plastic surgeon daughter: Philly was like a father to her but he didn’t leave her much money. Well, what the hell, Rick wants to make everyone happy and redeem himself, so he lets Roxy take over the Crown Jewel, their flagship island resort—and he makes peace with Max and Tyler, the grown sons who never knew him (Philly paid off their mothers), then befriends tough but cute reporter Gracie Lick, and investigates the mystery of Philly’s parentage. Gee, Philly was adopted! Can it be true that Philly’s real mother, 14 when he was born, is now married to aged billionaire Armand Farquar? And did the young Lorraine rescue her newborn son from a Dumpster when her heartless lover tossed him in and then bravely give him up for adoption? She did! And is her lover, Philly’s father, now the Vice President of the United States? He is! Will reporter Gracie Lick take this unlikely story and run with it? She will!
Michaels’s cluttered style has been noticeably trimmed this time around, which keeps the over-the-top plot moving right along. For the fans.Pub Date: Dec. 30, 2003
ISBN: 0-7434-5779-X
Page Count: 320
Publisher: Atria
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 2003
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by Kristin Hannah ‧ RELEASE DATE: April 1, 2000
The heartfelt soap appears to be Hannah’s chosen romance niche, and she mines it skillfully. (First printing of 125,000)
Hannah’s sequel to On Mystic Lake (1999) is yet another tear-jerker set in northwest Washington State.
Perfect mother Mikaela (“Mike”) Campbell takes a hard fall off a horse, hits her head, and sinks into a coma. In order to help bring her out of it, perfect husband-doctor Liam sits at her bedside and begins to talk to her about their life together. He brings her favorite music, scented potpourri, and, to place across her inert body, sweaters that may smell like home. He also tries to keep life as normal as possible for their two kids: Bret, nine years old, and Jacey, Mike’s teenaged daughter by her previous husband. Going through Mike’s closet to find a prom dress for Jacey, Liam stumbles on souvenirs of her first marriage and a picture of her ex—not just any old, anonymous first husband, but Julian True, a gorgeous superstar actor, the hero of women’s fantasies all over America. Liam has always known that he got Mikaela on the rebound; she was honest about the fact that he was not the love of her life. But she is the love of his life, and when she doesn't respond to the sound of his voice, he contacts Julian in hopes that the actor can save Mikaela. Julian travels up to Last Bend, a cutesy town founded by Liam’s larger-than-life father and filled with homey shops like the Emperor’s New Clothes store and Zeke’s Feed and Seed. When Mike finally comes out of unconsciousness and into her family’s emotional upheaval, she apologizes to Liam and bids goodbye to Julian. Yes, she’s discovered that it’s that gentle guy who stays with you through years of cramps and decorating the Christmas tree who defines what love really is.
The heartfelt soap appears to be Hannah’s chosen romance niche, and she mines it skillfully. (First printing of 125,000)Pub Date: April 1, 2000
ISBN: 0-609-60592-5
Page Count: 336
Publisher: Crown
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2007
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