Brockmann, Suzanne - Sunrise Key trilogy, Freedom's Price
Sat, Feb. 12th, 2011 08:07 pmArgh. I can't even say DW ate my post; if I had written it there, it might have saved a draft instead the utter disaster of my computer crashing and my text program not auto-saving. Grrr.
Anyway, Brockmann's contemporaries have hints of promise, but frequently not enough conflict to keep me engaged. Her strengths are her weaknesses: her characters tend to be sensible and practical, her guys understand "no," and her woman have sexual agency. These are all good things, except she's not great at creating long-lasting emotional conflict precisely because her characters are so well-adjusted. As such, most of the twists and turns in these categories feel a bit superfluous, and each book reads as a bit longer than it needs to be, despite only being a hundred-so pages long.
(No need to tell me the Troubleshooter series is much better; I have finished two books and really like them. Will elaborate later; stupid eaten post.)
( Kiss and Tell (1996) )
( The Kissing Game (1996) )
( Otherwise Engaged (1997) )
( Freedom's Price (1998) )
Anyway, Brockmann's contemporaries have hints of promise, but frequently not enough conflict to keep me engaged. Her strengths are her weaknesses: her characters tend to be sensible and practical, her guys understand "no," and her woman have sexual agency. These are all good things, except she's not great at creating long-lasting emotional conflict precisely because her characters are so well-adjusted. As such, most of the twists and turns in these categories feel a bit superfluous, and each book reads as a bit longer than it needs to be, despite only being a hundred-so pages long.
(No need to tell me the Troubleshooter series is much better; I have finished two books and really like them. Will elaborate later; stupid eaten post.)
( Kiss and Tell (1996) )
( The Kissing Game (1996) )
( Otherwise Engaged (1997) )
( Freedom's Price (1998) )
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