Hawk O'Toole's Hostage
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Average customer review:Product Description
To Hawk O'Toole, she was a pawn in a desperate gamble to help his people. To Miranda Price, he was a stranger who'd done the unthinkable: kidnapped her and
her young son off a train full of sight-seeing vacationers. Now, held hostage on a distant reservation for reasons she cannot at first fathom, Miranda finds herself battling a captor who is by turns harsh and tender, mysteriously aloof and dangerously seductive.
Hawk had assumed that Miranda Price, the beautiful ex-wife of Representative Price, would be as selfish and immoral as the tabloids suggested. Instead, she
seems genuinely afraid for her son's life--and willing to risk her own to keep him safe. But committed to a fight he didn't start, Hawk knows he can't afford to feel anything but contempt for his prisoner. To force the government to reopen the Lone Puma Mine, he must keep Miranda at arm's length, must remember that she is his enemy--even when she ignites his deepest desires.
Slowly, Miranda begins to learn what drives this brooding, solitary man, to discover the truth about his tragic past. But it will take a shocking revelation to finally force her to face her own past and the woman she's become, and to ask herself: Is it freedom she really wants...or the chance to stay with Hawk forever?
Sizzling entertainment from the first tantalizing scene to the last, Hawk O'Toole's Hostage is one of Sandra Brown's classic romances available in
hardcover for the first time.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #457698 in Books
- Published on: 1996-12-01
- Released on: 1996-12-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 215 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Library Journal
Published in 1988 when Brown was just another budding romance novelist, and soon out of print, this tale of a kidnapper who falls for his captive is being resuscitated in hardcover.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Review
"No one understands sexual fantasy better than Sandra Brown. . . . Ms. Brown inventively blends a variety of fantasies into the fabric of her very real romance."
--Romantic Times
"Ms. Brown's larger than life heroes and heroines make you believe all the warm, wonderful, wild things in life."
--Rendezvous -- Review
Review
"No one understands sexual fantasy better than Sandra Brown. . . . Ms. Brown inventively blends a variety of fantasies into the fabric of her very real romance."
--Romantic Times
"Ms. Brown's larger than life heroes and heroines make you believe all the warm, wonderful, wild things in life."
--Rendezvous
Customer Reviews
An 'okay' read...hero is too unlikeable....
This is a early book from Ms. Brown and written in the 80's for those out there who were curious. The hero was what made me not like this story as much as I would've.
He was very broody and unlikeable in his manner and personality. I think she was trying to portray him as being very mysterious and lost, but he just came off as mean and illogical.
His whole reason being that his father sold some land for money for the reservation and the people swindled him and closed down a silver mine that the reservation needed. The hero, Hawk, is determined to get it back, even if it means kidnapping a woman and her child to force the hand of the senator.
Hawk is so angry for the plight of his people that he mistreats the woman and pretty much emotionally abuses her simply because she is white. (Mind you, he isn't all Native American and he even went to a big college in the city so the hate doesn't make sense in the scheme of things.)
Miranda the heroine tries to explain to him that she isnt married to the senator any longer and they hate one another, so he wont help her. Hawk doesn't see it that way and continues on the collision course.
Love blooms between the two and they find themselves trying to save the mine and themselves.
It was an okay read, but Hawk's mistrust and downright hate for white people chilled the book to the point of a mutual hate for the hero from the reader. The ending didn't make him any better a person in my eyes and just confirmed my dislike. My sympathies are with Miranda and her son for putting up with the guy.
Tracy Talley~@
Overall Okay Book
This book is not great but it will keep you reading until the end. The first chapter piques your interest because of the incongruousness of the situation--a group of theives allowed to kidnap a boy from a crowded train because the passengers thought it was a performance. Things like this and the bits of humor throughout keeps you flipping the pages. The shortness of the book helps too, though. I read it in three hours and I don't read all that fast.
Brown captures the love a mother has for her child beautifully. One of my favorite parts was when Miranda said if you have to kill me, don't do it in front of my son. Brown also captures a child's feelings well. How a child can change from happiness (at being kidnapped) to terror because his mother is afraid but then his quick trust (for his captor).
However, I had to deduct the two stars because I really did not like Hawk. He kept humiliating her, forcing himself on her, and taking advantage of the love Miranda had for her child. To get Miranda to comply to everything, Hawk threatened her with taking her child away. Moreover, I could not feel the spark between the two characters or understand how Miranda could fall for him in the first place when he put her child's life in danger.
Better to get this book from the library than to actually buy it.
Hawk O'Toole's Hostage
I've read several of Sandra Brown's romance novels and loved them all. But Hawk O'Toole's Hostage was the best romance novel by far! It wasn't as predictable as all her other books. It had great suspense. It took many unexpected turns. I checked the book out at the library and read it three times before I had to return it. It was too good to put down and I had to reread it to catch tiny bits of the plot I missed the first time. Excellent book! You've got to read it!





