TEST
It’s safe to say I don’t want to live in Shannon McKenna’s fictional world. The bad guys are Machiavellian and ubiquitous, and way too much gruesomely horrifying stuff happens to reasonably good people. But, man, she’s fun to read. I had plans — big plans including a trip to Costco and Trader Joe’s (I needed some peppermint Jo-Jo’s) — before I started reading this book. A day later, I hadn’t done a thing but (briefly) sleep and read. From start to finish, Blood and Fire is a wild ride full of sex, violence, torture, revenge, breathtaking getaways, kick-ass men and women, crazy families, and, of course, true love.
Blood and Fire is the eighth book in Ms. McKenna’s McClouds and Friends series and I think it’s the best. My favorite books in the series are those that feature non-McCloud heroes — Seth in Behind Closed Doors, Nick in Extreme Danger and Val in Ultimate Weapon. Blood and Fire’s hero, Bruno Ranieri, is only a semi-McCloud by proxy: He was Kev McCloud’s best friend and non-blood brother during the years Kev was separated from his clan. (Let me pause here and say Blood and Fire won’t make a lot of sense if you haven’t read the previous books in the series although I suspect it would still be a fun read.)
Bruno is — like all Ms. McKenna’s heroes — gorgeous, cynical, funny, and blessed with a big brain and a talented dick. He’s an orphan with a murky past — he suffers from nightmares that suggest something very bad happened to him when young — who, as the novel begins, has been roped in to running his Zia Rosa’s diner in Seattle. (Rosa is, somewhat inexplicably, off caring for one of the McCloud spawn.) Diner duty would suck for Bruno except for one thing — the sexiest woman he’s ever seen keeps coming in every night and he’s sure she’s as hot for him as he is for her.
The woman is Lily Parr. Lily has had a flat out shitty life. Her mom died giving birth to her and she was raised by her father, Howard, a fertility doc who, when Lily was in her early teens, became a suicidal, drug-addicted disaster. Lily has for years busted her ass writing thesis papers for university students too rich or too stupid to pen them themselves in order to keep her father in an expensive New York psychiatric facility. The last time Lily went to see her father he began to babbling about a “them” who were always listening (and who killed Magda Ranieri because she was “trying to find proof”), and about Magda’s son who will “know how to lock it.” Lily has no idea what he’s going on about, but she figures out it must be damn important because, within hours of that visit, Howard has been murdered and Lily’s barely escaped super assassins who seem to know her every move.
Lily does the only thing she thinks might save her; she travels to Seattle to find Magda’s son where she plans to do whatever it takes (read: seduce him) to finally discover the story behind her father’s sad life and death. She and Bruno meet, banter, and, beginning on page 88, have life-changing sex on the dirty floor of the room behind the diner. Bruno suggests they quit the grubby apartment for his swank condo and, as they walk out the door, headed for heavenly hot tub coition, bad guys jump out of a large black SUV and begin shooting. Bruno instantly kills three — three! — of the violent thugs and he and Lily — and this book — are off and running.
I kept flipping the pages, desperate to discern what would happen next. Would King, the incredibly creepy psycho with literally unbelievable power over his ingeniously bizarre minions, be able to use his wealth, drugs, torture, technology, and all around evilness to destroy Lily and Bruno? Would the next, bound to be coming up soon, sex scene between Lily and Bruno be as steamy and as inventive as the last? Would every character ever featured in the series play a role in kicking King’s butt? Would Kev, the McClouds, and Bruno ever have a group hug? And, since just about every McCloud book has a wedding and/or a birth in it, who would tie the knot and pop out a kid by the novel’s end?
I’m not going to give away the answers to any of these compelling questions. I’ll just say that I found King to be a vastly more interesting villain than Dr. O of the other McCloud books and that I crowed with joy every time Tam and Val graced the pages of the book. Oh, and if I could find a man who could bake and, um, cuddle like Bruno, my husband would have a serious run for his money.
Ms. McKenna is not a writer for purists. Her plots are overblown, her characters over-share, and her prose is over the top. Her fight scenes are overly detailed and the escapes her heroes and heroines make are well into the realm of the miraculous. In her recent books, her HEA’s all seem to lead to a wedding and a baby in the belly and that life choice doesn’t necessarily suit her damaged, danger-obsessed lovers. Blood and Fire is longer than it needs to be and, at its end, has a completely questionable lovers’ misunderstanding. It’s not only TSTL; it just doesn’t make any sense. If you’re looking for an orderly, edited, sensible read, this book is not for you.
But, if you’ve got a few days you can ignore your family/pets/job/plants/life, and you crave escapism at its sexy gory best, pick up Blood and Fire. By the time you get to the line where Lily first propositions Bruno and he finds himself stammering because all the “blood in his body rushed to his groin, leaving his brain dangerously undermanned,” I’ll bet you’ll be hooked. I know I was. I didn’t miss those Jo-Jo’s a bit!
Grade: B
Book Type: Romantic Suspense
Sensuality: Hot
Review Date: 25/11/11
Publication Date: 2011/10
Recent Comments …
Yep
This sounds delightful! I’m grabbing it, thanks
excellent book: interesting, funny dialogs, deep understanding of each character, interesting secondary characters, and also sexy.
I don’t think anyone expects you to post UK prices – it’s just a shame that such a great sale…
I’m sorry about that. We don’t have any way to post British prices as an American based site.
I have several of her books on my TBR and after reading this am moving them up the pile.