Reviews

The Devil's Own by Sandra Brown

mvbookreviewer's review against another edition

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4.0

4 Stars Romantic Suspense

Wow!!!
That was exactly what I was looking for when I chose to re-read this oldie goody from Sandra Brown wrote under her pseudonym Erin St. Claire. Sandra Brown’s earlier books deliver in spades on what I look for when I read romances. She gives me exactly what I need with her larger than life, tortured and hot as sin heroes and delivers on all fronts with the right kind of heroine to bring down the hero to his knees. I just love her older books and get my fix now and then to balance things along in my world of romanceldia.

The Devil's Own is book 2 in the Hell Raisers series book 1 of which is Led Astray which I re-read and reviewed earlier last year. 35 year old Lincoln O'Neal, one of the most renowned and prolific photojournalists of the world is celebrating his departure from the war torn Montenegro when he is waylaid by the woman who walks into the cantina and promises him a good time. Linc has earned his reputation as a photojournalist during the evacuation of Vietnam and has recorded 35 mm of film every war and catastrophe since then. On top of how much he has had to drink combined with the red hot desire that flashes through him when the wickedly sensual woman proposes to him, Linc who wants nothing more than to escape the war torn hell he has been living in for the past six weeks finds himself at the mercy of do-gooder Kerry Bishop who wants his help in rescuing 9 orphans from war ridden country to give them a better life in the US.

Kerry Bishop is the coveted daughter of rich parents who has led a sheltered life with her diplomat of a father until scandal had rocked her entire world leaving her with a bitter taste of reality. Wanting to make amends for her father's atrocities, Kerry has been living in Montenegro for the past 9 months or so, teaching the 9 orphans enlisted in her care, getting them ready for their new lives back in the US. However knowing that she alone would not be able to fulfill the task of getting the children safely to the point where they are supposed to take-off, Kerry does the next best thing and scouts the local cantina for the most disreputable mercenary soldier she can find.

What she finds is Lincoln, who has always looked out for his hide when push comes to shove, and what she mistakes for his weapons turns out to be his coveted camera equipment. However knowing that she is running out of time, Kerry forces him to work with her, knowing that resentment and anger would rule Linc's utmost emotions throughout the 3 day trek through the jungle. However that doesn't stop her from wanting what his blatantly sensual touch and kisses evoke and doesn't stop her from craving Linc with every fiber of her being. Respite from making a fool of herself comes when Linc mistakes her for a nun which puts an additional strain on Linc to keep his hands off of the woman who heats up his blood in a way that has never happened before.

I just flat-out loved everything about this novel. Linc turns out to be one of those heroes you cannot forget because he demands nothing less when he steps into the picture. Handsome, cynical and lethally attractive, Linc doesn't know what hits him when he starts coveting Ms. Goody-Two-Shoes who lands him in trouble in the first place. Knowing that she is a woman he can never have doesn't stop him from craving her and neither does it stop the sexual tension that lingers between them that can be cut through with a knife. One of the best parts of the book for me was the explosive tension between the two which comes to its heady conclusion delivering fireworks of all kinds towards the end! *Sigh!!*

The romance and heady attraction between the two doesn't detract from the adventure aspect of the novel. The danger that surrounds them in a country that has been stripped bare by the civil war that has raged in it continues to hound them through their trek to reach safety. The last moments right before they board the plane are edge-of-the-seat variety moments that makes this story a well-balanced romantic suspense on all aspects.

It was an additional plus point to revisit Cage and Jenny from Led Astray and experience their happily ever after in this novel. A tale of opposites attract with Linc being the proverbial bad boy hero who was brought up by a drunken lout of a father and never had any sort of formal education after high school meets his match in the society school bred Kerry and gives them both a love that leaves the reader breathless on all accounts.

A very highly satisfying romantic suspense, which makes me wonder why authors today do not write classics such as this one where heroes do not turn into wimpy puddles just because the woman of their dreams walks into the picture.

Recommended for fans of Sandra Brown and fans of romantic suspense that delivers on all counts.

raven_wolfe's review against another edition

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3.0

253

cgrasley's review against another edition

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2.0

8 hr 25 min
This was not good.

jbarr5's review against another edition

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3.0

gd read

belle_1187's review against another edition

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1.0

I'm a big fan of Sandra Brown's usual suspense-and-romance books, so I got this on a whim from the library. I was extremely disappointed in the book. Exceedingly predictable, poor writing, and full of romance-novel trope (ridiculous arguments to "further" the plot, will-she-won't-she, etc).

Quick read, but very glad I borrowed this book rather than purchased it.

alexa_ayana's review against another edition

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4.0

Reread 2nd : 25 september 2014
Read 1st : 2009

si0bhan's review against another edition

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2.0

I’ve read a single Sandra Brown book and found it to be an okay read, and I was curious about more of the author’s work. When I requested a Sandra Brown book from the library, I’d been hoping for another romantic suspense… yet, they gave me a contemporary romance that doesn’t really have the romantic suspense elements I’d been hoping for.

Although this wasn’t what I had hoped for, I was curious about it and happily gave it a read. My feels towards this one ended up being mixed. A part of me wanted to give this a three-star rating, but, in the end, I had to round it down to a two-star rating. The Devil’s Own had the potential to be interesting, but it failed to live up to what I had expected. Things never went as far as they could have, and I kept hoping for more. I was happy to read it in a single sitting, but there were a lot of things that made me feel uncomfortable – mainly, the male lead had plenty of moments where he was not a romantic lead with his behaviour.

All in all, this one had potential, but it failed to hit the right spots for me.

fernbell's review against another edition

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4.0

Kerry had to find someone to help her get nine orphans through the jungle with a war going on. She found someone but He wasn't who she expected. Seemed a quick read as you followed along with the characters with all the problems they run into. Hard to put down as kept you involved in the story.