1st Floor Show me where

FICTION/Brown, Sandra
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor FICTION/Brown, Sandra Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Warner Books [2000]
Language
English
Main Author
Sandra Brown, 1948- (-)
Physical Description
217 pages
ISBN
9780446527019
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Tiel McCoy is driven beyond ambition to the point where her television journalism career is her whole life, meant to compensate for loneliness and guilt about a failed marriage to a husband who died before they could get things straight. A long-postponed vacation is sidetracked when Tiel stops at a convenience store in a desolate part of Texas and gets caught up in a robbery attempt. The robbers are teenage runaways. Ronnie Davison is being sought on charges that he kidnapped his pregnant girlfriend, Sabra Dendy, daughter of a ruthless millionaire who will stop at nothing to separate the pair. Tiel sees the situation as a sure-fire ticket to the anchor position on the Dallas station's proposed prime-time news show. But Tiel finds herself gradually and genuinely engaged with the cast of characters at the store when the attempted robbery turns into a hostage drama. Tiel helps negotiate with the FBI agents who eventually converge on the scene. She gradually becomes just as focused on positioning a good story as on saving lives and keeping the young couple from honoring a desperate suicide pact. A fellow hostage is a ruggedly handsome rancher named Doc, who helps keep tempers calm and delivers Sabra's baby under tense and dangerous circumstances. Tiel recognizes Doc from a story she'd done several years earlier. As the hostage drama draws them closer, Tiel struggles with her ambitions and Doc with his visceral distrust of the media. Plot twists and cliff-hanging chapter endings will keep the best-selling Brown's fans coming back for more. --Vanessa Bush

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Workaholic Dallas TV reporter Tiel McCoy thought she would take a well-earned vacation, but while driving to a secluded condo in New Mexico, she hears a radio report that changes her plans. Teenager Sabra Dendy, only daughter of Fort Worth multimillionaire Russ Dendy, has been kidnapped. Soon Tiel learns that Sabra, who's pregnant, has run away with her boyfriend, Ronnie Davison. Smelling a story, Tiel heads for the remote town of Hera to interview Ronnie's father, thinking the couple might go there for help. But when she stops at a convenience store for directions, Tiel encounters Ronnie and Sabra bungling a hold-up attempt. As Sabra goes into labor, Ronnie takes everyone in the store hostage, and Tiel and a handsome cowboy who seems to know a lot about medicine deliver Sabra's daughter. Tiel learns that the desperate young couple are fleeing to Mexico to escape Sabra's dictatorial father, who has vowed to separate them and put their baby up for adoption. He has even threatened to kill the child, and Sabra and Ronnie have vowed to commit suicide if they are thwarted. Bestselling author Brown (The Alibi) sets up believable conflicts (Ronnie once killed a puppy, rather than return it to an abusive owner). If the dialogue and sex scenes occasionally seem stilted, this popular author's tale still hits hard and keeps moving briskly to its satisfying conclusion. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

In a series of coincidental events, reporter Tiel McCoy finds herself in the middle of a breaking news story just as she is about to start a much-needed vacation. She becomes an unwilling participant in a kidnapping and robbery when a teenage couple hold up a gas station. Sabra, the 17-year-old girl, is not only pregnant and a runaway, she is the daughter of wealthy Texas businessman Russell Dende, who despises Sabra's boyfriend, Ronnie. When Sabra goes into labor, Tiel is forced to play midwife and negotiator, always keeping her reporter's instincts alert. The other customers/hostages play minor roles, with the exception of the mysterious Doc, who increasingly commands Tiel's interest as he assists with the delivery. Full of stereotypical characters and, at best, an implausible plot, this is not one of the acclaimed Brown's best efforts. Reader Enid Graham finds a distinctive voice for each character without dramatically overdoing it. Although this will not achieve much literary applause, the author's large following will grab this one and find an entertaining escape.DSusan McCaffrey, Haslett H.S., MI (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The action takes place in New Mexico, but all the main characters are from Texas, always fertile home ground for perennial bestseller Brown (The Alibi, 1999, etc.). Dallas TV reporter Tiel McCoy, en route to a vacation, takes a detour to look for Sabra Dendy, the daughter of a Texas millionaire who's hotfooted it out of town with her boyfriend, Ronnie Davison. Tiel bumps into the duo as they're holding up a small-town convenience store. Turns out Sabra's not only pregnant but in labor; her baby is delivered by the mysterious 'Doc,' who proves to be a Dallas oncologist ruined by the unjust accusation that he helped his mortally ill wife commit suicide. Naturally, Tiel falls for Doc. Naturally, Sabra's dad is a creep who sics the FBI on the misguided lovers. Naturally, there's plenty of time for steamy sex in between the flying bullets. True love conquers (almost) all with time-honored predictability, and Brown's many fans will undoubtedly enjoy her latest.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.