Her Favorite Temptation
by Sarah Mayberry
Rating: 4 of 5 stars
My Review:
I have loved
almost all of Sarah Mayberry's Harlequin Blaze books. This one is a
Harlequin SuperRomance. Less lustful and less explicit than a
Harlequin Blaze and much more emotionally involved. I didn't dislike
the book, but it wasn't as engaging to me as Sarah Mayberry's Blaze
books.
Leah is a doctor.
About to hit her thirtieth birthday and ready to finally take
control of her life. In this case, change her career a bit from the
path her parents expect her to take. Still a doctor, but a different
speciality. It takes a lot of courage from Leah to tell her parents
about the change. I admired her for meeting the hostility head on
and yet still being vulnerable and hurt when she wasn't accepted.
She was authentic in her reactions and I appreciated that she
struggled with her problems, but still chose to take the difficult
path.
Will is the
musician with a brain tumor. He's living next door to Leah while
waiting for surgery. I found it very complicated that he didn't tell
Leah about his health issues, mostly because as a contrast to Leah
wrestling with her problems so much and digging deep to find her
courage, Will just sort of lets it go because he doesn't want Leah to
treat him differently. I understood, and so did Leah, but it left me
a bit conflicted.
When Will and
Leah first have sex, and she doesn't know about his tumor, I screamed
a bit inside and said “that is so cliched”. It fit the story
just fine, but there was definitely an “aww no” inside me.
Mostly feeling like, who would think now is the best time to have sex
for the first time?!
The love story
developed slowly and easily. I appreciated how Will and Leah became
friends and were there for each other without having to Insta-Lust
everything. Their motives were well understood the whole time and
they were both sweet, caring characters. They each were capable of
giving and receiving love and were genuinely nice. Will was capable
of dealing with tears. Leah was able to deal with Will's pain and
fear. I was relieved that these two acted like adults and weren't
disparaging or angry at the other when issues came up.
While the book
felt very weighty with all the issues Will and Leah have to deal
with, I didn't feel like I was drowning in their sorrow. We get the
general sense of their feelings, but we're not so overwhelmed that
the happily-ever-after love story is swept away with pain. I was
glad for that, in the sense that I wasn't crying every time something
sad happened. But I did feel the peripheral weight of Will and
Leah's issues.
This was a
touching story with two characters that deal with their monstrous
issues in a healthy, adult way. Not quite a tear jerker, but close.
Don't read on the day you just need an escapist pick-me-up. Do read
when you're looking for inspiration and courage to deal with your own
life, or when you need to be reminded of the indomitability of the
human spirit and ability to still find happily-ever-after in
difficult situations.
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