Dana sez–I bought this when it was on special back in 2016, but you’ll do much better nowadays to forgo the collection in favor of downloading the individual titles.
I still love Welcome to Temptation best, with Davy’s story, Faking It, a close second, but I want to single out two other novels in this seven-novel collection as being of special interest.
***spoilers follow***
The first is Crazy For You, which is a romance novel that, wait for it, is also one of the best deep dives into stalking you’re ever going to read. It’s an out-with-the-old- boyfriend/in-with-the-new, but the old boyfriend won’t let go, and there follows a truly disturbing plotline involving, in order, dognapping (multiple times), housebreaking, intent to commit malicious wounding (he breaks in—again—and boobytraps her house), and outright assault. Best (or worst) of all, Crusie puts us front and center in Bill’s head, and of course his behavior makes perfect sense to him. When he stopped by again the next day, she said, “Bill, we have nothing to talk about ever again. Go away, please,” so he was forced to do something to bring her back. Bill is an utterly convincing and truly terrifying character. I have read straight, hard core crime fiction with bad guys who creeped me out less than Bill does. Through it all Quinn the art teacher is falling in love with lifelong best friend mechanic Nick, who is reluctantly falling back and also happens to be her sister’s ex-husband. Insert smirk here, but it works, partly because of Crusie’s always great dialogue and partly because of the subplots involving Quinn’s parents and Quinn’s best friend Darla. This screwball comedy/stalker thriller is a balancing act that not every author could pull off. And think about that title for a minute. Talk about double duty.
The other novel I want to draw attention to in this collection is Bet Me. According to Crusie’s prologue, it’s also her first, which like so many first novels didn’t publish until she’d hit it big with her later work (and also after, she says, a massive rewrite). It’s the story of actuary Min and business seminar teacher Cal. Both are afraid to commit for fear it won’t work out so it hasn’t for either of them so far, and Min has major body image issues. I admit, at first I was like “Oh, please” because aren’t we all so tired of those books where the woman emerges from her chubby/plump/zaftig/always self-hating cocoon aided by the attention of that One Great Guy (an exhausted chick lit trope if there ever was one), but it works here, partly because Cal really is that great guy, and partly because of Liza and Bonnie, Min’s terrific friends. Not forgetting Min’s mother and sister, object lessons for Min in how not to live her life.
But what I like best about Bet Me is that it is a straight romance, no bodies show up, no aliens appear, no sparkly vampire materializes out of the mist to bite anyone on the neck. No, this is Min and Cal and their bumpy journey to love and happy ever after. It’s everything a romance novel should be and all too frequently isn’t. There is never much setting in Crusie’s novels, but memorable characters and lots of smart, smartass dialogue more than make up for it.
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Book Review Monday Chatter Bet Me Crazy For You Jennifer Crusie No Stars Welcome to Temptation
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2 Comments Leave a comment ›
I love both of these books, and a lot of her other ones. The thing I really like about “Bet Me” is the afterword where she tells us what happened after the end of the story and how all the characters got what was coming to them.
Yeah, I liked that a lot, too.