(Mass Market Paperback)
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| Available in eBook | $5.85 |
October 8, 1871--One small spark ignites the entire city of Chicago, sending its residents into panic. But amid the chaos, a chance encounter leads to an unexpected new love.
Unaware of the fire sweeping toward them, Deborah Sinclair confronts her wealthy, powerful father, determined to refuse the society marriage he has arranged for her. Suddenly, out of the smoke and flames, a stranger appears--gun in hand, intent on avenging an unforgivable crime. As fire consumes the elegant mansion, the ruthless man takes the fragile, sheltered heiress hostage.
Swept off to mist-shrouded Isle Royale, Deborah finds herself the pawn in Tom Silver's dangerous game of revenge. Despite her horror at being kidnapped, she is drawn to the people of the close-knit community and to the startling beauty of the island. As she engages in a battle of wits with her brooding captor, Deborah begins to understand the injustice that fuels his anger, an injustice wrought by her own family. And as winter imprisons the isolated land, she finds herself a hostage of her own heart....
In The Hostage, Susan Wiggs masterfully combines real historical events with a powerful captive/captor romance and deep emotions. She draws readers in with her strong writing style and memorable characters. Once more, Ms. Wiggs demonstrates her ability to bring readers a story to savor that has them impatiently awaiting each new novel.
More Reviews and RecommendationsSusan Wiggs has won many awards for her work, including a RITA from Romance Writers of America. She has also published with a number of houses, including Avon, HarperCollins, Warner and MIRA Books.
In addition to being a militant romance writer, a feminist, a guilt-ridden mother and a perfect wife, Susan Wiggs grows mutant tomatoes, speaks French, and plays the cello. Her hobbies are reading, traveling the world and Fair Isle knitting. She lives on an island in the Pacific Northwest with her husband, her daughter, and the world's most ill-mannered Airedale. Although she has convinced her family that toiling away at a writing career makes her a candidate for martyrdom, she secretly believes it's the second-most fun to be had.
Wiggs, a Harvard graduate, confesses that a book once saved her sanity. Trapped at Barcelona Airport during an airline strike, she vividly remembers savoring every lush, escapist word of a romance novel. Ever since, it has been her quest to write the sort of books people cling to in crowded airports, or whenever life gets too crazy.
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
March 29, 2001: From the very beginning, her wording draws you into the story with the way she makes you wonder... and with the texturized writing style that makes the reader feel as if s/he is there while keeping such a fast pace in the story... this book is written as any romance, but is ever so special and unique, like an epic..
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
June 06, 2000: I really enjoyed this book. Susan Wiggs' stories are unique in that they don't seem to be the same plot with different details each time. She doesn't crank them out as fast as other authors and I can really tell a difference in terms of quality. Tom and Deborah each had many layers to their respective personalities that were gradually revealed and the development of their relationship was quite believable. The end of the book was disappointing only in that I was finished reading my new friends' story and there wasn't anything more. Can't wait for the next one!