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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good, but still missing something,
By A Customer
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Sharp Edges (Hardcover)
I was excited about this book, because the beginning of it (published behind Deep Waters) seems to be a return to JAK's (and AQ's) normal style, which I think is great. (I do vastly prefer the Quick stories). But I was sad to discover that although this is a pretty good book, it still seems that you are watching the story through a dark, cloudly glass. Her earlier stories made you feel right in the thick of things. I don't care about the "formula" angle of these plots, the formula works great for me. I do want to care more about the characters, however. Ms. Krentz is still about the best Romance writer around. The sad part is that she could be (and has been) so much better! Please slow down. I would pay double for book I wanted to read many times over. None of the recent ones have qualified.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Sharp Plot,
By PamelaJ (Tulsa, OK) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Sharp Edges (Paperback)
I liked this plot. I think JAK even managed to surprise w/who was the bad guy in the end. It had some good twists and turns. The male/female leads were typical, but I like that. I don't want her to change up how she writes her leads. This was published in 1998. It's a good read.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Enjoyable but not Krentz's best,
This review is from: Sharp Edges (Mass Market Paperback)
Deep Waters and Absolutely, Positively converted me into a Jayne Ann Krentz fan and I went on to read her earlier work after those two books, including her Regency romances under the pseudonym Amanda Quick. Her trademarks are intelligent, independent heroines and brooding heroes with dark histories. They usually have names that you don't normally tag to romantic heroes and heroines, like Gideon, Molly and Harry. In this story, it's Cyrus, a private detective, and Eugenia, a Museum Director. The death of a glass collector on Frog Cove Island bring the two together on official missions that hide their real motives: Eugenia to investigate the death of her artist friend (who was also one of the collector's many girlfriends) and Cyrus to hunt down an ancient artifact that was stolen under his security watch three years ago. Their initial suspicion of each other plays against strong physical attraction, but while there is heat and sexual tension, there's no sense of inevitability that these two characters deserve each other and should fall headlong into each other's arms. The main characters are disappointingly flat and the love scenes seem contrived. Krentz tries too hard to make the characters outwardly different that they end up as stereotypes - the sleek, sophisticated Museum Director and the strong, silent detective with the too-colorful shirts. The novel's redeeming features are the snappy dialogue and the quirky secondary characters. If you want to start on a Krentz romance, I'd strongly recommend Absolutely, Positively, Grand Passion or Deep Waters. While Sharp Edges is still a good read, it won't warm you up on cold nights.
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