Categories: Contemporary
romance; small-town fiction
Series: Thunder Point #1
Publisher: Harlequin MIRA
Book source: I bought the e-book
Publisher's description: From Robyn Carr, #1 New York Times bestselling author of the popular Virgin River novels, comes Thunder Point - the highly anticipated new series that will make you laugh, make you sigh, and make you fall in love with a small town filled with people you'll never forget.
Nestled on the Oregon coast is a small town of rocky beaches and rugged charm. Locals love the land's unspoiled beauty. Developers see it as a potential gold mine. When newcomer Hank Cooper learns he's been left an old friend's entire beachfront property, he finds himself with a community's destiny in his hands.
Cooper has never been a man to settle in one place, and Thunder Point was supposed to be just another quick stop. But Cooper finds himself getting involved with the town. And with Sarah Dupre, a woman as complicated as she is beautiful.
With the whole town watching for his next move, Cooper has to choose between his old life and a place full of new possibilities. A place that just might be home.
Robyn Carr’s new series is off to a strong start with The Wanderer. I really like the setting, a small town
called Thunder Point, situated on the Oregon Coast. It’s somewhat larger than Virgin River, but
shares some similarities – it’s a working town, with a strong sense of
community and a smattering of small businesses anchoring the main street. Actually, it reminds me more of JoAnn Ross’s
Shelter Bay than of Virgin River, including the small restaurants, commercial
fishermen, and the importance of the high school football team. There is plenty of scope for future stories
set in Thunder Bay, though we only meet a few of the town’s residents in the
first book.
Hank Cooper is a typical Carr hero: a veteran with a streak of honor a
mile wide, a sense of “what’s right” to match, and a chiseled physique.
“Typical” doesn’t mean cookie-cutter identical; Cooper is different enough from
other Carr heroes to be his own person.
I liked Cooper's willingness to step in to protect and mentor young Landon,
the new kid in town, who is being bullied, and also his need to figure out what his
friend Ben wanted Cooper to do with the inheritance Ben left him.
I really liked Sarah as well.
She’s a delightful blend of strength and vulnerability, strength and
fear. Her protectiveness toward her
brother and the strong bond of affection between them are evident. So is the
chemistry between Sarah and Cooper, once they actually meet. I
was a little surprised that Carr didn’t make more of the fact that both Cooper
and Sarah are helicopter pilots, though.
I kept waiting something to happen that would need Cooper's experience or require them to work together, but it never
did.
Some reviewers have commented that the romance takes a long time to get
off the ground, and they’re right.
Cooper and Sarah don’t even meet until well into the book, which meant there wasn't as much time spent on their developing relationship as you usually get in a romance novel. That
didn’t bother me as much as it could have, since what was going on during those pages was interesting and
served to set up the series. It
may be best to think of The Wanderer
as fiction-with-a-romance, rather than a romance novel per se. In fact, it’s really
fiction-with-two-romances, or even four: in addition to Cooper and Sarah, there
are Mac, the deputy sheriff, and his best friend and fellow single parent Gina;
Mac’s Aunt Lou and her secret beau; and a charming romance between Landon and
Mac’s 16-year-old daughter Eve. This,
again, is typical of Carr’s small-town series fiction, though often the secondary
or additional romantic couples starred in their own books earlier.
Romance isn't all that goes on in The Wanderer; in addition to the bullying subplot, there is a mystery surrounding Ben's death. I was a little disappointed that the mystery was not that well developed before it was solved; I felt that if Carr was going to include it at all, it ought to have more weight in the overall storyline. But that may just be because I love mysteries.
Romance isn't all that goes on in The Wanderer; in addition to the bullying subplot, there is a mystery surrounding Ben's death. I was a little disappointed that the mystery was not that well developed before it was solved; I felt that if Carr was going to include it at all, it ought to have more weight in the overall storyline. But that may just be because I love mysteries.
Regardless of that small complaint, I’m definitely looking forward to the next books in this series! Nothing can replace Virgin River in my heart, but Thunder
Point could become another small town I love to visit.
I would have liked the mystery to be stronger too. Still, a great book!
ReplyDeleteAgreed! Can't wait for the next one; I think it comes out in late June. Looks like it will be about Mac and Gina -- interesting, since I thought this one had covered their romance. (And I thought the next one would be about that nice doctor.)
DeleteI really want to read this one. I always love Robyn Carr's writing style so I'm hoping my hold comes in soon. Great review!
ReplyDelete-Kimberly @ Turning the Pages
I think you'll like it. It's not her absolute best work, but it's good and definitely enjoyable.
Delete