July 1, 2022: Volume XC, No. 13

Page 40

“A thief and a duke fall in love.” heartbreaker

engagement fell apart. Her excitement is short-lived when she discovers she’ll be co-leading the project with engineer Levi Ward, her grad school nemesis, whose cold, cutting behavior and outspoken inability to work with her on an assignment have stuck with her. Their work on BLINK is an improvement though, as Levi doesn’t immediately bail on the project. But when little things start to go wrong for Bee and her team, she begins to wonder if her co-lead isn’t above sabotage. Adding an additional layer to Bee and Levi’s rivalry is the fact that they run two very popular anonymous social media accounts. Since the accounts are both rooted in science and academia, Bee and Levi unknowingly frequent the same internet circles and have even developed an online friendship without knowing each other’s identity. While the epistolary elements of the book, including tweets and direct messages, are novel, it often feels unnecessary. The quiet, pining hero in a lab setting isn’t new territory for Hazelwood, and readers may wonder if she pushes it in a new direction here. The answer is no. While Hazelwood is clearly a talented writer who’s tapped into readers’ desire to find powerful, proudly nerdy women in science getting happy-ever-afters, she’s missed the opportunity to try new character types that don’t feel like The Love Hypothesis (2021) with slightly different packaging. A quick read, though less than fresh.

TO CATCH A RAVEN

Jenkins, Beverly Avon/HarperCollins (384 pp.) $8.99 paper | Aug. 23, 2022 978-0-06-286174-0 In post–Civil War Charleston, an accomplished swindler and a law-abiding tailor pose as a married couple to recover a stolen document. Raven Moreau and Braxton Steele could not be more different. She’s a fiery Black woman from New Orleans, part of a colorful family of thieves, forgers, and tricksters. He’s a respectable tailor from Boston, heir to a shipping fortune and a pillar of New England’s Black business community. But Braxton’s family history is less straightforward than he imagined. He learns that his father was once a forger who worked with the Moreau family and that he was in love with the beautiful Hazel Moreau, Raven’s mother. Raven and Braxton are both dismayed when an ambitious Pinkerton agent threatens their families and forces them to work together on a mission to recover a stolen copy of the Declaration of Independence. They become domestic servants to a loathsome White woman who wants them to act as if they are enslaved. Inevitably, their daytime ruse leads to late-night passion, and they must both decide whether love is a good enough reason to scuttle their other plans. Either way, they won’t be able to avoid each other now that their parents have rekindled their youthful romance. In this third and final novel of the Women Who Dare series, Jenkins once again invites modern readers into the world of Black Americans in the 19th century. 40

|

1 july 2022

|

fiction

|

kirkus.com

|

Jenkins’ normally smooth pacing and skillful plot construction are lacking here, making for a choppier reading experience. But don’t miss this book. Her characters are as compelling and richly detailed as always, and she tackles societal issues that are all too relevant today. A love story with insights about the economic and social realities for African Americans in the years after emancipation.

HEARTBREAKER

MacLean, Sarah Avon/HarperCollins (384 pp.) $8.99 paper | Aug. 23, 2022 978-0-063-05678-7 A thief and a duke fall in love in MacLean’s second Hell’s Belles romance. In the north part of London, she’s Adelaide Frampton, unassuming wallflower and distant cousin to a duchess. In the south, where she grew up, she was Addie Trumbull, skilled cutpurse and daughter of a notorious criminal. Now, she has a hidden identity as the Matchbreaker, exposing the secrets of “less than ideal” potential grooms so women don’t have to marry them, and she’s teamed up with three other women to form the Hell’s Belles, a girl gang dedicated to taking down evil, powerful men. Henry Carrington, Duke of Clayborn, hasn’t stopped noticing Adelaide since they first met and knows there’s more to her than meets the eye. When they wind up in a race to intercept his brother’s elopement—she apparently to stop it, he to stop her—Henry finds himself in continual awe of this fierce woman, even when she frustrates him. Between a carriage accident, fights, and an only-one-bed situation, the pair are thrown together again and again and soon find they don’t want to be apart. Though there are some action-packed scenes, much of the story revels in a languid pace filled with intimate thoughts, delicious yearning, and many sighworthy romantic moments. A man with a rough upbringing and hardened view of love is a common trope, so it’s refreshing for that role to be filled by the woman—but there’s still a softness and sweetness to Adelaide that make her a nuanced character. Subplots regarding the Hell’s Belles’ clients and targets add great tension to the book, while the women’s friendship brings levity and humor. But it’s the quiet, vulnerable moments between the central couple, who embrace each other as true equals, that will ensnare reader’s hearts. Sublimely sensual and passionate.


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.