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Lädt ... His Secret Son (The Westmoreland Legacy) (2017. Auflage)von Brenda Jackson
Werk-InformationenHis Secret Son von Brenda Jackson
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Melde dich bei LibraryThing an um herauszufinden, ob du dieses Buch mögen würdest. Keine aktuelle Diskussion zu diesem Buch. His Secret Son merges two of my favorite past times. Old movie charm with a little Westmoreland temptation and creates a modern day classic. Ms. Jackson is constantly evolving in her skill as an author and that talent shines through the seduction that is Coop and Bristol. Fans of Love Affair and Sleepless in Seattle will love the sweetness of the tale that haunts like a melody that takes a hold of the soul. Add in that alpha Westmoreland style and you get an addictive taste of heaven, that is waiting to be explored. Have been reading Ms. Jackson for years and always loved her books, but I think I've met my match with this heartwarming story of second chances and fairy tale moments. ( ) Originally posted on Tales to Tide You Over To start out, the title is a misnomer as Bristol made no attempt to keep Laramie (called Coop) from his son, but rather was informed Coop had died. It’s not a new twist, but the author manages to make it more complicated than the traditional one by having Coop lost on a classified SEAL mission that no one was supposed to know about. She shouldn’t have been able to get that information, but contacts through her best friend, and the fact that she carried his child, made it happen. All this is backstory, but crucial to understanding the push and pull of the story’s present when Bristol, now a successful artist in New York City with a two-year-old son, faints at the sight of a dead man. Coop felt no need to celebrate the holidays. His parents, while nice people, were far more interested in each other than they’d ever been in him (a sad fact, but one consistent with his childhood events). His boss sends him on a vital SEAL mission to New York, a task which turns out to be an attempt to get Coop to take some time off, something he’s resisted since just after recovering enough to rejoin his team, many months after they rescued him from where he’d been held captive and tortured while thought to be dead. He’d planned to return to the base right up until the moment he noticed a gallery opening for an artist named Bristol, a rare enough name to give him pause. As soon as he recovered, he tried to find her in Paris, where they’d first met and acted on an instant attraction for a three-day pleasure fest ending in the deployment where he was captured, but failed. It’s a bit of a shuffle as he learns she’s claimed they were married, and she tells him of the son he didn’t know he had, but that’s only the beginning of the story. This is a true Christmas miracle as Coop bonds with his son and explores the possibility of renewing his connection with Bristol. Bristol, on the other hand, has seen enough of death. First her mother, then her father, and finally her aunt had died, but none of that prepared her for the crushing blow of Coop’s death as it was reported to her. She refuses to go through that pain again even knowing the love she gained in those three short days has never died. I enjoyed the story, a lovely second chances with what felt like real complications. The contradiction between Bristol savoring the few short years she had with her father while denying herself the opportunity of even that with Coop makes the story feel more real rather than less because it’s a very human reaction. The detailing of their sexual chemistry every time they look at each other feels a little overdone at times as does the frequent mention and establishment of everyone involved as wealthy for one reason or another…usually inherited. It’s good that Coop and Bristol can both support themselves so have the ability to be independent, but the emphasis on wealth weakened the story for me a tiny bit. They became less “everyman” when the story would have been perfectly good with just his SEAL salary and the earnings from her paintings. Though I have to admit I enjoyed the connection where Coop had met her famous father as a teen and his mother loved her father’s artwork. Still, those were small flaws in an otherwise compelling tale. The sex is well written and not very detailed despite still being explicit. The relationships with Laramie (their son), Bristol’s friends, and Coop’s SEAL teammates were all nicely done, and again, realistic in that everything wasn’t perfect. Bristol’s manager especially did a good job of annoying Bristol with her matchmaking and dismissal of Coop…though she had some cause because he appeared to have abandoned them when none of her New York friends knew the true story. Only her best friend in Paris did. Even Coop’s relationship with his parents is important because, like Bristol, it informs how he looks at love and commitment. This is a love at first sight story, but it doesn’t stop, or even start, there. Neither admits to the emotion until that instant attraction has grown through spending time with each other and sharing their son. At first, it felt more like lust than love, but I could see the deeper emotions developing along with the physical. Coop and Bristol might have been slow to learn each other’s life histories, but they seemed to have a firm grasp on who they are, both in their own sense of self and recognition of each other. Young Laramie was a delight, and the whole story worked because what kept his parents apart felt real. That Bristol was Coop’s touchstone during his captivity is lovely, but I appreciate how the author chose to go light on the details in favor of focusing on how he survived. Similarly, the tragedy in Bristol’s past is overshadowed by the joy she found in the good times. The story might have gone a little over the top at times, but it offers strong, decent people I could feel for and situations I enjoyed, fulfilling the reasons I read romance novels quite well. P.S. I received this ARC from the publisher through NetGalley in return for an honest review. Zeige 2 von 2 keine Rezensionen | Rezension hinzufügen
Gehört zur ReiheWestmoreland Legacy (Coop - 2) Die Westmorelands (32) Gehört zu VerlagsreihenHarlequin Desire (2557)
Fiction.
African American Fiction.
Literature.
Romance.
HTML:Three nights with a Texan...and one pregnancy surprise! Only from New York Times bestselling author Brenda Jackson! The Texas rancher and navy SEAL who fathered Bristol Lockett's son died a hero's death...or so she was told. Yet when Laramie "Coop" Cooper strolls into her exhibit at an art gallery three years later, he's very much alive??and still making her pulse zing. The all-consuming chemistry between them is as undeniable now as it was then, but Bristol won't risk her heart??or their son's. Little does Bristol know he's determined to win over his unexpected family at any Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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Google Books — Lädt ... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Klassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:
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