AUTHOR: ABIGAIL ROUX & MADELEINE URBAN
Pages: 322
Date: 21/10/2013
Grade: 5
Details: no. 2 Cut & Run
Own / Kindle
The Blurb
“Six months after nearly
losing their lives to a serial killer in New
York City , FBI Special Agents Ty Grady and Zane
Garrett are suffering through something almost as frightening: the monotony of
desk duty. When they're ordered to take a vacation for the good of everyone's
sanity, Ty bites the bullet and takes Zane home with him to West Virginia,
hoping the peace and quiet of the mountains will give them the chance to
explore the explosive attraction they’ve so far been unable to reconcile with
their professional partnership.
Ty and Zane, along with Ty’s father and brother, head up into theAppalachian mountains for a nice, relaxing hike deep into
the woods... where no one will hear them scream. They find themselves facing
danger from all directions: unpredictable weather, the unrelenting mountains,
wild animals, fellow hikers with nothing to lose, and the most terrifying
challenge of all. Each other.”
Ty and Zane, along with Ty’s father and brother, head up into the
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Online friends have been harassing me for weeks now,
insisting that I need to read these
books and hurry up already. I hate it when my friends are right. Not because I
have a problem with discovering new to me fabulous books with addictive
characters and a wonderful and angsty storyline. No, all of those are things I
love. I hate my friends being right about me needing to read these books
because I really do not have the time to fall in love with a series that consists
of seven and a half books. Don’t my friends know I have books I need to review,
ideally close to the release date?
It’s hard to stay angry with said friends if they
recommend books this good though. Because of course they are right. I’m loving
these books and do need to read them in quick succession because I need to know
how this story, these characters and especially their relationship is going to
develop. It really doesn’t matter that I still wish those friends had been
wrong about these books about me needing to read them. Books up for review or
not, it seems that I’ll be spending a considerable amount of my (reading) time
with Ty and Zane over the next week or so.
Ty and Zane – sigh – what can I say. I’m only on the
second book of this series and I’ve already completely fallen in love with
these two men. It is impossible to not smile every time they start on one of
their frequent and completely obnoxious arguments. And while the characters
themselves may be completely unaware of it – or trying to deny it to themselves,
as the case may be – it is so clear that the feelings these two men have for
each other go deeper than those of colleagues or even friends. Still, Ty and
Zane hadn’t been working together all that long and had been intimate for even
less time when they both nearly lost their lives in Cut & Run. And although
they are now back working together, even if it is doing boring and mind-numbing
desk work, it is clear that neither has come to terms with everything that
happened to them in that first book, never mind the attraction between them.
When Zane fails his psychological evaluation they are
both forced into taking a holiday from their jobs as FBI special agents, with
their future to be determined after they return. When Ty invites Zane to join
him on a journey home to visit his family in West Virginia it comes as a bit of a
surprise to both of them because they had both noticed how they had started to
drift apart. The trip should have been a relaxing opportunity to find out where
they stand with each other; do they want to continue with their fragile and
undefined relationship, do they even want to continue being partners in the
FBI?
This wouldn’t have been a Ty and Zane story though if
this trip had indeed turned into a relaxing holiday. While hiking in the
Appalachian Mountains with his father, Earl, and brother, Deuce, Ty and his
partner Zane run into far more problems that they could ever have imagined.
Worsening weather conditions and wild animals are the least of their problems. When
they run into a deliberately set booby-trap on the mountains they know they are
about to run into a situation they aren’t equipped to deal with. Turning around
to gather reinforcements would be the sensible thing to do. One insensitive and
hurtful remark from Earl sets them on a course towards conflict and violence –
a course they may not survive.
This is one of those books that puts the reader on a
rollercoaster of emotions ranging from laughing out loud to reading with tears
in their eyes and every emotion imaginable in between. There were so many times
I wanted to take Ty and Zane by the shoulders and shake them while telling them
to just go with it, give in to the feelings, be honest with themselves and each
other. And yet it makes so much sense in the story that they don’t. I loved
following these two as they slowly come to realisations about themselves, each
other and the way they are together.
Taken from The Mind of Gray's Tumbler Page |
“As partners, it seemed like they could read each other’s minds. But as
lovers – or even friends – they barely knew each other at all.”
And,
“Zane slept much better with Ty alongside him than he did when he was
alone, and they both knew it.”
I could have happily killed Earl when he asks Ty the
question that nearly breaks him and had tears in my eyes while reading about
the devastating effect this had on the man who seems so strong and self-reliant
in every possible way. Deuce on the other hand was a ray of sunshine in this
story. I loved the way he managed to get both Ty and Zane to at least start
thinking about their feelings and what they wanted and needed.
It may be that my reading of the story up to here was wrong,
but to me Ty had always come across as the strong and independent one and Zane
as the partner who needed their closeness most. So it was interesting to read
that it is Ty who reluctantly admits to himself that he may be in love with
Zane - even if he doesn’t know what being in love actually feels like – and
Zane who is convinced that his feelings for Ty have nothing to do with love.
There is more, so much more, I could write about this
book and these characters, but I won’t. This is supposed to be a review and not
a book in its own right. All I want to say before I stop raving about this book
is that the last few pages of this story were beautiful and heart-warming –
resulting in a huge grin on my face. I’m so glad I already own Fish &
Chips, the next book in this series. I give myself a few hours at most before I
start reading that story.
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