
Yuck. It is almost 4am, I am not at work, it is pouring rain outside, and I can't sleep. I had a ridiculous day... I felt uber sick this morning, like can't get out of bed, weak muscles, can't eat kinda sick, and almost called in sick to work, and really regret that I didn't. I worked 2pm til 10pm and between 2:30 and 6:30 we checked in 200 guests. It was four hours straight with no time to catch my breath, just a huge line of people waiting to check in with no end of the line in sight. Really not fun, especially since the group (a primarily Korean bible group) featured lots of people with exactly the same name, perfect for creatingmass confusion at check in. I survived, and despite a major case of the grumps when it was done, cheered up after watching (and making fun of) Centre Stage 2 (the first one is FAR better) and visiting elise and shaeneez on my way home.
I also just watched the newest episode of So You Think You Can Dance and reaffirmed the fact that I get way to attached to contestants on reality tv shows. Very exciting to see my fave dancers from previous seasons dance again, very annoying that katie holmes didnt perform live, (although I was shocked at her singing abilities, kind of amazing) and soooo sad when Jason, the one I wanted to win, got kicked off. What an amazing dancer, and such a cutie, when he cried I almost did too. Also kind of annoying that the only routines performed commemorating the 100th episode were the emmy nominated ones... I would have liked to have seen a wider selection of dances, maybe one from each seasons. I mean, Ramalama and the Bench were both performed on the same night of the same season... not a lot of variety there considering they had 5 years worth of dances to select from.
but I'm way off of my point-- on to the book review. So just before watching that disappointing episode of sytycd, I finished a book by one of my favourite authors, Sherrilyn Kenyon. Now, Kenyon's Dark Hunter books are incredible, I love her characters and her writing style. This novel, from Kenyon's newer series about the Bureau of American Defence (BAD), was incredible at times and kind of convoluted at times. I've read the other two books in the series, though not recently, and whether it is because this is the first one written in collaboration or because this one features a bit of an unresolved ending, I was disappointed a little bit. Which isn't to say this wasn't a good read, I definately recommend it, it just wasn't totally up to the standards I expect when I see Sherrilyn Kenyon on the cover.
The storyline follows Terri Mitchell a former DEA agent who left that agency under a cloud of suspicion following the death of her partner. Terri has moved on to work as an agent for BAD, with her own goal of discovering who is truly responsible for her partner's death and clear her name.
Her love interest is Nathan Drake, whose storyline can be seen as complicated or convoluted
depending on how you look at it. So Nathan is a former Spec Ops agent who went AWOL from his team after a mission in Bolivia in order to return to help his dying mother by keeping his naive twin brother from going to jail by taking his twin, Jamie's, place and serving the jail time for a crime neither he nor his brother actually committed so his brother could nurse his mother back to health. The poor guy follows in a long line of tortured and heartbroken male characters from Sherrilyn Kenyon though, as his mother dies before he gets out of jail, and on the very day he is released, his brother is shot and killed. So Nathan feels the need for revenge and attempts to deliver that revenge to those who killed his brother.
Complicated enough for you? Though his storyline unravels naturally and in a manner that a reader is able to follow, the mistaken identity, hidden identity, twins switching places thing bugged me a bit. The bad guys are also a bit of a complicated factor in this book, and wasn't as clearly explained.
So the original bad guy is Marseaux, and though we know early on that he is both drug running, mobster guy and somehow linked to a biological warfare virus being 'tested' or rural villages in third world countries, we find out later that he is mearly a pawn in the game of Fra Bacchus and his secret order. Then we find out that Fra Bacchus is mearly the pawn of the Fratelli de Sovranoi (the secret order) and that the order is attempting to create a new world order, one where they literally are the new ruling power. That part I understood, convulted as it was, but what threw me off was when one of the DEA agents, Brady, a minor character through most of the story, turns out to have somehow been responsible for it all along with Josie, another agent. While I can see the little strings these two characters pulled to make things happen, (and I can also see how this secret order will be used as a recurring bad force for future books in the series) I felt that the ending of the book left too many loose ends that left me with tons of questions and not really in a good, suspenceful, waiting for the next book kinda way. All in all, I was underwhelmed by the whole bad guy situation, kinda felt like there were a few too many layers to the game.
A lot of the books I've been reading recently have featured a secret organization bent on saving the world that no other agencies know exists. I felt this one was good, lots of suspence, steamy chemistry between the characters, lots (maybe too many?) minor characters/potential leaks to the bad guys, and overall a really good read. I wish the bad guy storyline was a little simpler, but maybe the next book will clear things up for me. Anyways, read it and see what you think.
I'm finally tired (yay!) so I'm gunna stop there, although this review is kind of negative and mostly me attempting to explain the story. The book was not nearly as negative as I've described, aside from the unresolved-ness of it, it is actually quite wonderful. Sorry for being one-sided, maybe in the future I'll fix up this review, but for now, g'nite!
Happy Reading,
Steffie



