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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars steve finally gets it right!
"Savage Desire" is a reward to those who were disappointed with the culmination of third installment of the Morgan saga, "Lost Love, Last Love". That book ended less than satisfying with Steve and Ginny behaving curiously cool after all they had been through. Steve was particularly cruel and, as usualdid not acknowledge that he was the catalyst for...
Published on May 7, 2001

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A happy ending to the saga
I must admit that I jumped from the first book (Sweet Savage Love) straight to this fourth book, without having read Dark Fire and Lost Love, Last Love. After finishing Savage Desire, I don't think that I missed much of the actions on the first two books, as there are a lot of references from Steve and Ginny's previous relationships while they've been apart...
Published on February 16, 2005 by Michelle888


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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars steve finally gets it right!, May 7, 2001
By A Customer
"Savage Desire" is a reward to those who were disappointed with the culmination of third installment of the Morgan saga, "Lost Love, Last Love". That book ended less than satisfying with Steve and Ginny behaving curiously cool after all they had been through. Steve was particularly cruel and, as usualdid not acknowledge that he was the catalyst for most of the subsequent destructive events. Ginny is certainly no saint, but gosh Steve is really arrogant. Somehow I came away with the usual conclusion that Ginny was the blame for everything. "Savage Desire" makes Steve a much more sympathetic individual and rightly so. He had a lot to make up for--blatant affairs, indifference, abandonment, etc. Steve's a very sexy man, a powerful one, but after all those years I was looking for some sort of closure--admittance of love and value of Ginny. Flash back to old material was necessary. The device was used to recreate the volatile atmosphere and for Steve to rethink his actions. Going back to Mexico, revisiting and crushing all the old demons, cleared the way for Steve and Ginny to finally find a sweet and enduring relationship. Steve is no less desirable a character in this book, actually I think he is more so. Ginny remains Ginny. Steve's unforgettable and tempetuous love. She finally finds what she was always looking for in "Savage Desire". If any romance novel heroine ever deserved a bit of happiness, it's Ginny Morgan!
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18 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This series had a good run, November 29, 2000
In 1876, Virginia "Ginny" Morgan tries to reconcile with her spouse Steve after a long separation caused by her being incapacitated due to an illness. Although she loves her spouse and would like to start over with him, Ginny desperately needs to hold and hug their two children, Franco and Laura who had been left behind in Mexico and then sent on to France to stay with an aunt. Steve also loves Ginny, but has doubts about their relationship. Still, he agrees to try to over come the past and look to the future as a family.

Even her children question what took her so long to return to them while her spouse doubts he will ever trust her again. Still, she works at healing the relationships with her husband and children. When Steve is forced to return to Mexico on business, Ginny accompanies him because she refuses any long-term separation like they always did in the past. However, neither one knows that the return to Mexico may prove too powerful for this pair to remain a family.

SAVAGE DESIRE is a passionate late nineteenth century love story that has all the trademarks of a Rosemary Rogers romance. The intrepid Ginny will fight anything and everything for the love of her family, although Steve seems childish in adhering to his obstinacy towards Ginny and her previous health problem. The children ooze a charming innocence that feels so genuine that the audience will think "out of the mouth of babes." Ms. Rogers' fans will delight in this entertaining cross-Atlantic tale.

Harriet Klausner

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A happy ending to the saga, February 16, 2005
I must admit that I jumped from the first book (Sweet Savage Love) straight to this fourth book, without having read Dark Fire and Lost Love, Last Love. After finishing Savage Desire, I don't think that I missed much of the actions on the first two books, as there are a lot of references from Steve and Ginny's previous relationships while they've been apart.

After a long separation from Steve and the twins, Ginny is now back in London trying to rebuild her relationship with them. When duty calls Steve back to Mexico to settle some old business, Ginny, not wishing to be apart from him once again, insists on accompanying him. And so they find themselves in another adventure, with past experiences creeping up and haunting them once more, bringing back painful memories. Will they be ever be able to let go of the past? Can they ever bring themselves to trust one another and look forward to a happier future? Will they ever be able to confide with each other without feeling ashamed of what they've done? These are questions that they face and know they must overcome. You will notice that most of the chapters end with these sorts of questions. We know that Steve and Ginny love each other to distraction, yet theirs is a case of "can't live together, can't live without each other".

I liked that we see the more gentle side of Steve in this book. I appreciated the fact that he was truly sorry for having caused Ginny so much pain and is full of regrets for not being able to protect her from the horrible, degrading things that she has suffered, and now wish to atone for his sins and want to live a quieter life with her and their children.

I do wish that Ms Rogers didn't feel the need to put Ginny in the same situation again by having her abducted and raped once more. From what I gather, she was also subjected to the same fate in the second and third book and I felt that enough is enough.

But overall, despite skipping Dark Fires and Lost Love, Last Love, I am glad that Steve and Ginny have finally found the happiness that they deserve. This was the ending that I was looking for from the first book.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars This book really needed to be written, August 28, 2001
By 
Say what you like about Rosemary Rogers latest books being awful. I mostly agree. If I read another of her books where the heroine dances like a gypsy.... Seems all her heroines are re-makes of Ginny. I picked up this book at the used bookstore, and remembered Steve and Ginny from when I was a teenager. I've read tons of books since then, but Steve and Ginny stayed with me. I spent a month re-reading the first three books before reading Savage Desire just to refresh my memory. Rogers writes Steve and Ginny so convincingly that I was obsessed with these two characters for the whole month. I didn't always like them, but they were so real. Rogers definitely has the talent to make you believe in her characters. Savage Desire finally lets Ginny and Steve grow up.
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars What a disapointment!, February 23, 2001
By A Customer
While I have not enjoyed this author's most recent efforts, I always loved the first two novels in the Steve and Ginny saga. This book was nothing but a rehash of those first two books. Although nine years have passed the characters showed no growth or maturity. Ginny is still the same selfish whiner and Steve a thoughtless and mean jerk. Although it's been several years since I read the first two books, I remember liking the characters. As I read this one I kept hoping they'd break up and get killed off since I disliked them so much. Plus I could swear some of the scenes were lifted verbatim from the earlier novels. If Ms Rogers can't come up with anything new, maybe it's time to give it up!
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars How did this get published?, January 20, 2001
By A Customer
This book gets NO stars. It's awful. Plotlines from former Ginny and Steve books are constantly brought up, which really isn't writing, it's re-hashing. Ginny is a weak, vacillating character. Steve is an arrogant jerk. What made for a good read in the earlier books is missing here. And how! If you read no other books by Ms. Rogers, and picked this one up, you would really wonder how this was ever published. I have read her other stuff, and can only conclude this was published to trade on her name, former better books, and to make a buck. I think, and really hope, this will conclude the Ginny and Steve series. It should have ended several books ago. Ms Rogers should leave the Golden West, and turn her sights elsewhere. She used to actually know how to turn out a pretty good story. She's shown no originality, nothing new in quite some time. Unless she does, maybe a career change is in the wind?
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Well....., April 8, 2003
By A Customer
This book is far superior to "Dark Fires" and "Lost Love, Last Love" but still disappointing. How many times can Ginny be kidnapped and raped in this series of books???? Why can't we have ROMANCE without the rape and sexual abuse? This is not romance!

Still, the characters do manage to resolve their differences and live happily ever after. (FINALLY!)
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Satisfying ending to the saga..., August 9, 2002
By A Customer
I thought this was a satisfying ending to the saga of Steve & Ginny. They grew up at last, working through their problems to come together the way they should be. Exciting love scenes, and all the questions answered at last. Wonderful!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars I Have To Admit I Liked This, September 23, 2007
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Mv2.3 "This Is My Fake Name Badge" (In the Aether and in the Other) - See all my reviews
Honestly, Rosemary Rogers has managed to write a novel for her Dynamic Duo that actually rises up to the challenge of writing romance in the 21st century. Gone are the twit and the tumbler from Sweet Savage Love and in their place are two people who have gone through hell and have matured. They think, they are reflective, they are multi-dimensional. The only drawback is that the pair of them have been so used and abused that at times they seem more like wraiths than real people. On the other hand, I wouldn't expect them to be happy-go-lucky. This novel felt more like a sequel to the first than the two novels that came between them. Those were lost plot threads in search of point and purpose. But Savage Desire is a good read, and I think Rogers deserves kudos for her attempt.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars More about Steve Morgan?, December 21, 2007
I have read all four books in the Steve and Ginny series, and re-read them, and re-read them. I find myself wanting to know more about Steve's early years, the time he spent with the Indians, his Indian wife, and the time he supposedly spent in Paris.
Then there is the boy that Steve had with the widow, a boy that looked so much like his legitimate son he had with Ginny. That could be another book about this boy growing up and learning who his father really is.
I keep wishing Ms. Rogers will come up with another book in which she writes about all the things casually mentioned in some of the other books, a book to fill in the gaps in the dangerous life of Steve Morgan.
I also wonder why Hollywood never turned any of these books into a movie.
I think the search to find actors to fill the role of Steve and Ginny would could be like the search for a Scarlet O'Hara for "Gone with the Wind."
This last book repeats many of the things that happened to Steve and Ginny in the first book. But who cares, Steve and Ginny are still my favorite literary couple.
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Savage Desire
Savage Desire by Rosemary Rogers (Hardcover - 2000)
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