Try and keep up as I try and explain my love-hate relationship with this book. It starts out easy enough to understand. Girl has top secret job working for an agency so secret that it doesn't have a name. Girl works for a guy that's so smart that he intimidates everyone around him while turning her blood to molten lava with unfulfilled desire. Girl and guy get caught in a gun fight and must hide out in an ultra luxurious villa under some new and secret protocal that girl can't figure out and then spend the weekend breaking down headboards and burning up the sheets. With me so far? Well good, because that's about as far as I got before the twists and turns got out of control.Now, I will say that this book kept my attention. It was just weird and intriguing enough for me to read all 2 million pages (at least that's how long it seemed). I was all with the unexplainable attraction and passion that bordered on animalistic. I was even ok with finding out that Ronan possessed qualities that went beyond those of your average male. Introducing a wholly new species of being was a bit of a stretch but what the heck, in for a penny and all that. Where the author started losing me was in the incredibility of the interactions between Eve and Ronan. We get that he's smart but who has time to sit with a calulator and figure out how much time it takes him to go from point A to point B? Even if your senses are far superior to the average human, who calculates all encounters by seconds? Better yet, what woman sees a man, even a super human man, devolve into the most basic of primates and then just pets him on the head and takes him home to treat her like the most basic of prey until he comes back to his higher senses?
I get it that this is fantasy, and I'm all in for exploring the unknown, that's why I stuck with it to the end, I just think there were instances where the author was doing a bit too much. We could have cut out about 2 hours of this nine hour tale (timing is according to the counter on my e-reader) and the book would have still been ok. As I said in the beginning, I have a love-hate relationship with this book. I loved it enough to read the whole thing and actually put thought into understanding the crazy parts but I do wish that they would have cut out some of the extra and used other ways of describing his genious than counting all time in seconds.


Five years is a long time to get over a love lost. Even though Houston and Rory have moved on with their careers and relationships, the chemistry that first ignited between them back in college is still there. To complicate matters, Houston has a secret that would explain so much of what happened between them all those years ago. Revealing the secret though may cause more damage than he can risk.
This isn't some tender love story with rainbows and cotton candy endings. It's hard and ugly; the type of love worth fighting for; the kind of love that endures.
It's often hard to imagine the lengths that people go to to abuse and control others. Everyday we encounter new people and we probably never think about the tortured existences that they lead behind closed doors. In this book, Contessa Newart is one of those people. To the unassuming eye, Contessa is just the frumpy, bookish intern who has been selected to work on the biggest case of the year. While this hasn't earned her points with her classmates, it does speak to her intelligence and capability. Staying below the radar has become an art that she's mastered so it's a surprise to her that she catches the eye of the one person that she thought would never notice or remember her.
I can't imagine having to grow up in a small town where everyone knows you and has known you from your first awkward moments until maturity. I do, however, know what it's like to have matured and not be seen for the person that I've become as opposed to who I was. This understanding makes Isabelle's character that much more relatable in this small town romance.