Book Review

Iron Cowboy by Diana Palmer: A Guest Review by Nonnie

Title: Iron Cowboy
Author: Diana Palmer
Genre: Contemporary Romance

Book CoverNonnie’s back! Our favorite anonymous reviewer, back for more fun and reviews-in-list-formation with a look at Diana Palmer’s Iron Cowboy.

 

The One That Made Me Cry (With Laughter)
By Nonnie

 

There are a few things you need to know before you start reading a Diana Palmer novel:

There is a 95% chance biscuits will be involved.

Women’s rights are a nebulous, easily dismissed issue.

Any slang in the book will come straight out of the 70s, along with most clothing styles, despite the fact that the books are meant to be contemporary romances.

The hero will be at least 12 years older than the heroine, who is more often than not between 18 and 23 years old.

The heroine has an 85% chance of getting pregnant the first time they do it, and will know she is pregnant in minutes (due to an aversion to the smell of bacon).

IRON COWBOY (Silhouette Desire #1856, 2008) has all the hallmarks of a typical Diana Palmer romance and more. MUCH MORE. As such, think of this more as a MST3K of the book, rather than a true review. In other words, I will be breaking it down for you, and this entire post is a big old spoiler alert. Please don’t let that get in the way of buying and reading it for yourselves, because DAMN, you guys. This is genius. Okay, now that that’s out of the way, on with the show.

1. Our heroine is Sara Dobbs, a 19 year old, innocent assistant manager of a bookstore in Jacobsville, TX, population less than 2000. (As we have seen through many previous books, for every one regular citizen in Jacobsville there are 5 mercenaries, 7 ranchers, and 10 drug dealers.)

2. On page 2 of the book we find out Sara has a sad past. Her parents did dangerous work abroad. (This is left deliberately vague at this point, but the implication is missionary work.) Her dad died violently, Sara and her mother move back home to her grandfather’s house in Jacobsville, and her mother becomes an alcoholic slut as a result of the tragedy. WOE. After being beat up by the children of her mother’s most recent lover, Sara runs home battered and bruised and her mother, riddled with guilt, vows to turn over a new leaf. But then a few days later…Sara quits thinking about it and we don’t find out what happened. If you’re wondering why this back story is dumped onto page 2, I AM TOO.
3. Our hero is the mysterious Jared Cameron. He recently rolled into town and bought the White Horse Ranch lock, stock, and barrel. Jared shows up at the bookstore and berates Sara for the lack of hardcovers and financial magazines. Then he tells her he likes mystery novels, biographies, first person adventure novels, and “anything factual on the North African campaign of World War II”. All righty then.

4. Jared orders books and wants them delivered and bitches about the time that will take. Jared, there is something called Amazon.com. Look it up. Sara meanwhile wants to charge him a $10 delivery fee for having to drive 6 miles out of town. Way to encourage repeat customers, Sara.

5. After the books come in, Sara talks to Tony the Dancer (Jared’s bodyguard. I KNOW. SO WEIRD.) and arranges a delivery time. “The voice had a decidedly Southern accent. Not a Texas one, a Georgia one, if she were guessing. She had an ear for accents. Her Grandfather had taught students from all over the country and around the world at Jacobsville Community College, and he often brought them home.” ORLY? A town population less than 2,000 would be able to not only sustain a community college, but would attract people from all over the country and the world?

6. As I mentioned earlier, Jacobsville is a hotbed of drug dealing activity. Despite the fact that there have been multiple shootouts wherein the drug dealers ALWAYS lose, and despite the fact that there’s a bunch of former military, mercenary, and law enforcement ranchers living in and around the town, they keep coming back and trying to set up new meth labs and shit. Drug dealers aren’t very smart.

7. You know who else isn’t smart? Sara. She is a single woman, living alone, and doesn’t own a cell phone. Nice.

8. Oh, and you’ll be happy to know that Sara has conservative morals, goes to church, and doesn’t “give out” on dates. I bet that prissy bitch doesn’t “put out”, either.

9. A few weeks later, having gone on a date with another man (hussy!), Sara stumbles across Jared at the local cemetery. The funeral he went to in Jacobsville 8 months prior was his daughter’s. Sad. He decided to bury her there because his grandfather lived in Jacobsville.

10. Chit-chat at the cemetery leads to Jared and Sara agreeing to be each other’s family and take care of each other when they’re sick. I don’t even know. What I do know is that this is some mighty big foreshadowing!

11. Sure enough, less than a week later Sara almost dies of a perforated appendix. Of course, since it ruptured, she had to have old-school, cut you wide open surgery, instead of the much easier to recover form laparoscopic option. Foreshadowing, part two.

12. Jared whisks Sara back to his ranch to recuperate, amongst heated sexual tension and mysterious talk of enemies closing in. But no worries! Sara will be kept completely in the dark and should be in no danger, right?

13. Upon arrival at Jared’s ranch, Sara meets Max, Jared’s supremely unprofessional, super seductive looking female attorney. Max is pissed and jealous of Sara, naturally.

14. A few days later, Sara is back at home and back at work. Still a bit sore, she attends a local barbeque in the company of Harley, a cowboy at a local ranch. Jared is there with – oh noes! – Max. DRAMA.

15. There seems to be some confusion about Sara’s incision. On Sara’s part, sadly. After first getting out of the hospital, she remarks that it’s a 6 inch incision. Now, at the barbeque, she says its 4 inches. That’s…a pretty big difference.

16. Holy cow. Max done lost her mind. Sara laughs at something and Max, believing herself to be laughed at, hauls off and slaps Sara right across her laughing mouf. I’m pretty sure that behavior is unacceptable anywhere, and at any time. Other than in soap operas. And yet Max is astonished when she is kicked off the property.

17. You know what else people in Jacobsville can do? DANCE. Is a mutha-effing dance-off, y’all! The Caldwell’s are doing a spirited Paso Doble, but then the Grier’s challenge them to a Tango. I’m totally not kidding here, guys. In a previous book there was a dance battle to the Macarena. THE MACARENA. Only 10 years after the fad came and went too. That’s practically current, by Palmer’s standards!

18. Jared returns from taking Max home, sweeps Sara off her feet, and then takes her home. He bluntly tells her he’s too old for just kisses, and that if she doesn’t want more she should tell him now and he’ll leave and end it tonight. Poor dumb Sara. Her internal thought process goes something like this: “I should tell him to leave, but he’s super hot. I’m a good girl! But he’s sooo dreamy. Surely he doesn’t want to have sex? He just wants some heavy petting. Yeah, that’s all he wants. And really, if it gets out of hand, I’ll just tell him to stop!” Poor poor Sara.

19. Sure enough, she is pretty much date raped on the couch. She loves the heavy petting and foreplay, but when shit gets real, she wants no part of it. Too bad a semi-drunk Jared doesn’t get the picture. When he comes out of his orgasm coma, he realizes Sara is not having fun. His reaction is not to soothe and reassure her of course, it’s to bitterly complain about small town girls and their repressed attitudes. Of course, once he figures out she vas a virgin he’s totally kind and gentle and understanding, right? HELLS NO. He is all “but you’re on birth controls, right? RIGHT? No? FUCK. I suppose you want all my monies now, hoor! But the joke is on you! I don’t want any more children, so you’ll either abort this hypothetical child, or I will sue you so the whole world can see you for what you are!!!!11!!1!!” (Sue her for what, I wonder? Not aborting her child? CLASSY.)

20. After this awesome reaction, Jared halfheartedly hopes he didn’t hurt her, and Sara retires to her room in a fit of well-earned catatonia.

21. Oh Sara. She is gazing at the fallen woman in her bedroom mirror. Unlike most Palmer heroines, she does know there’s such a thing as a “morning after pill” but her reasoning for not using it is that she would have to see a local doctor for it and that then the whole town would know about it. HONEY. Doctor-patient confidentiality. Look it up.

22. Jared, wracked with pseudo-guilt, gets blitzed the next day at his ranch. Max the whorish attorney didn’t leave as ordered, and instead is lying in wait. Catching Jared at a vulnerable moment, she convinces him that Sara was the aggressor and deliberately set out to seduce him. Jared agrees to let Max handle things, with a feeble “don’t hurt her”. This is some telenovela shit, this is.

23. Bright and early Monday, Max shows up at the bookstore with a check for 10,000 dollars and a crazy story. Seems as though Jared has been hiding out in Jacobsville because three “illegal aliens” from South America have come up to kidnap him and hold him for ransom. Seems that Jared is an oil magnate who foiled a group of terrorists that targeted his South American oil pipeline. The survivors are determined to kidnap him even though he no longer owns that pipeline? Because that way they’ll recoup some monies? I don’t even know. Long story short: BAD GUYS IS COMIN’! Only not really, because according to Max, they were apprehended outside Virginia that very day.

24. After more cutting words Max seems to realize that Sara may not have had a fantastic time with Jared. She finds out her true age and is like OMGWTFBBQ!!1! and backtracks like mad. You know you’ve been a dick when the no-good, aggressive, she-demon realizes you’ve crossed the line. Way to go, Jared.

25. Jared finds out the truth and feels awful. About time. Tony finds out the truth and hates Jared. Go Tony! Max turns out to be mega-dumb as apparently she inadvertently gave away her boss’s location and information to terrorists going by the super-obvious terrorist name “the Reconquistas”. Good thing they were apprehended…OR WERE THEY?

26. The next morning, Sara shows up at the bookstore and notices a beat up van in the parking lot. Her boss Dee is leaving to go to the bank and pick up some coffee, and they remark upon the van as she heads out. Shortly after she leaves, THREE STRANGE MEN walk into the bookstore. Shits about to get real, y’all.

27. They are tall and swarthy and muscular! She knows what the people in Jacobsville look like, these men is dark and foreign looking! They must be terrorists! (Apparently no Hispanics live in this tiny Texas town near the border?) And holy craps, she is too far from the phone (only they haven’t made a move toward her yet). And she only has the pocket knife she uses to cut open boxes with as defense! WHAT IS SHE GON’ DO?

28. And then. Guys. Seriously. Now comes the part in the book that literally made me cry with laughter. I mean, to the point that I stopped reading, called a few friends, and practically pissed myself laughing as I tried to adequately explain what happened. SRSLY. Sara realizes she only has one shot. And HOLY CRAP is it a long shot. And here is where I quote verbatim from the book:

“If she stabbed herself with the pocketknife and they could see blood, and she pretended to be unconscious and tried to look dead, they might be startled into leaving.”

I KNOW I WOULD BE STARTLED INTO LEAVING.

So let’s just recap for a second. Sara sees three strange swarthy (aka dark skinned furriners) men walk into the bookstore. She immediately thinks “terrorists!” even though they have yet to make any threatening move toward her. Too far from a phone (I guess? Now that I am rereading, she makes no mention of the phone as an option before she comes to this awesome plan of action) she decides her only chance is to STAB HER OWN FOOLISH ASS and play dead. Even better! She figured that since she knows where her appendicitis incision is, she will stab herself there since there probably isn’t anything vital nearby. Except maybe your freaking KIDNEY.

29. Then we get this:

“You come with us,” one of the men said in accented English. “We see you with the lawyer. You are Cameron’s woman. He will pay for you.”

“I am nobody’s woman. I will die before I go with you!” she said. And giving up a silent prayer, she jabbed the pocketknife into the incision, through her blouse. “Ooooh!” she cried, because it did hurt.

She crumpled to the floor with blood on her hands and shirt. She sighed heavily and held her breath. She looked dead.

The men hesitated. They’d planned well, and now their hostage had committed suicide right in front of them!

  30. Let’s recap. She jabbed herself with a POCKETKNIFE. Which probably had, what? A 2 to 3 inch blade, tops? Into her SIDE. She squeaks out a little “oooh!” and collapses and the freaking terrorists believe she’s dead? Also “they’d planned well”? ORLY? They decided to confront her in an open bookstore during business hours on a main street with passing traffic? Instead of following her home and nabbing her at night? And yet this is an example of master planning? No wonder they’ve been so successful. BRILLIANT.

31. Lucky for her, Harley shows up wearing a side-arm he uses to shoot rattlers on the ranch. The no-doubt incredibly confused terrorists make a run for it. To her credit, Sara admits to Harley that she stabbed herself, and to his credit, Harley is super confused by that. The chief of police comes by the hospital later to tell her that the three “Arabic” prisoners who were apprehended in Virginia escaped the day before, and were presumed to be the same guys who menaced her. The chief, upon hearing of her improvised stabbing, SMILES AT HER WITH RESPECT. WITH RESPECT. Ahahahaha!

32. The three kidnappers are caught, and Tony the Dancer comes to see her in the hospital. He offers to care for her while she’s recovering from her latest injury, and when she asks what Jared will think he tells her he is quitting now that the terrorists have been caught. Rightly assuming she’s the cause of the problems between Tony & Jared, Sara flushes. The doctor sees the flush, immediately assumes she has been sexxoring Jared, and asks to speak to her privately.

“You don’t have to say it. I read faces very well. What do you want to do?”

She started to deny it. She knew better. (Dr.) Coltrain was a force of nature. “I can’t kill an ant,” she said.

So is she pregnant? WHO KNOWS. All we know is that she can’t kill ants!

33. Tony chooses this moment to reveal that he was there when Sara was almost killed in Africa as a child. He was an American mercenary in the firefight that killed her father and gave her a traumatic brain injury. Okay. Thanks for letting us know, Tony!

34. Tony takes Sara home where they talk about his tragic past, Jared and his bone-headedness, and the future. Sara gets a phone call – the children’s book she’s been working on (off stage, of course) has been accepted by Mirabella publishing! She’s gonna be an author, y’all! And she gets paid and everything!

35. Then Jared shows up and the truth is out. Sara was only 10 when a grenade blast killed her daddy and scrambled her brains. She still has a piece in there! That’s why she has trouble color matching and remembering some things! WOE. WOOOOOOE! Jared feels like a dick.

36. A lot of boring stuff happens, and long story short, Tony is going to jail to get in with the kidnappers so when they’re released on bail they will be caught in the act of kidnapping. Jared is staying with Sara and they’re talking about this potentially one week old zygote like it is the real deal. Everyone loves a babby, right? RIGHT!

37. Oh! Also. In addition to being an oil tycoon, Jared used to be a securities expert, and prior to that was a cop in San Antonio, and before THAT he was in the Special Forces. Just how old is this fool, anyway?

38. Everything goes pretty much according to plan, the kidnappers are facing real charges now, and Jared asks Sara to marry him. There’s just one problem. She is afraid of sex now! Yup, Jared was soooo good last time that he gave the poor girl a phobia. Cue Barry White music and a slow, gentle lovemaking session.

39. Wonder of wonders, after a quickie wedding and a discussion of soccer (yeah, I don’t even know WTF brought that on), Sara tells Jared that she received her monthly visitor so there’s no baby as of yet. Jared tells her they will wait to start a family and will instead explore the world and find her a bookstore to own. MARRY ME, JARED!

I guess the moral of the story is, when a woman is feeling menaced she should forget about screaming for help, and should instead stab her appendix with the nearest sharp object. (Diana Palmer, Smart Bitches, Harlequin and their parent companies are not responsible for any of the said injuries should you indeed stab yourself.)

(SB Sarah adds: Thanks a LOT, Nonnie. Now I have “Hold me closer, Tony Dancer,” stuck in my head. Great.)


Iron Cowboy is available at Goodreads | Amazon | BN | Kobo | All Romance eBooks.

Comments are Closed

  1. …but not a community college.

    I come from a small town, though not as tiny as Jacobsville, it has fewer than 50k people, and our community college attracts people from around the world. Or at least the Middle East, Africa and Asia. They don’t have any specialized programs that I know of, and no I have no idea why people come from all around the world to go there.

    Palmer used to be my guilty pleasure, until I discovered I could have just as much fun reading other people’s reviews of her books. Mrs. Giggles has a collection that really should be on The Daily Show.

  2. TaraL says:

    @AgTigress – Thank you. I also thought it helped explain why she was still a virgin. *snort*

  3. darlynne says:

    My first thought was “look away, look away!” I have to excuse myself now. Nonnie, thank you. That was great.

  4. Lori says:

    I want to add my thanks to Nonnie for reading this so the rest of us don’t have to. Way to take one for the team!

    The only disappointing thing about this awesome review is that we didn’t do it as a Read & Post. This would have been even better than that crazy book about the football tickets that Sarah read whenever we did that—last year? The year before?

  5. Laura (in PA) says:

    HA! Hahahahahahahahahaha….

  6. Suze says:

    I’m another “thought Max was a guy” person, and that would have been AWESOME.  Totally alien to Diana Palmer’s universe (oh, how I loved her stuff when I was 14), but awesome.

    JamiSings, if your moral misgivings about the morning after pill are related to abortion, you should know that the pill doesn’t cause abortion, it prevents conception.  If you’re already pregnant, it won’t do anything, but if you’re not, then there’s a good (89%) chance you’ll stay that way.

    From How Stuff Works:

    Although scientists aren’t completely sure how it works, they believe that levonorgestrel prevents pregnancy either by stopping the ovulation process or by disrupting the ability of sperm and egg to meet in the fallopian tubes. Some speculate that the drug may prevent the fertilized egg from implanting as well, perhaps by making the uterine lining less receptive to the egg.

  7. Phyllis says:

    I read a truly terrible Diana Palmer book once. And I asked around and tried to read one of her books that was said to be ‘good’. I got less than halfway through and I, who hate leaving any book unfinished, just couldn’t do it.

    And again I ask: why do real authors NOT get published while she cranks out several books a year. Who buys this sh**?

  8. Karen H says:

    Your review was great!  Looks like Diana has changed her ways a little bit from when I gave up reading her books about Texas.  Back then, all those virginal girls had their first orgasms from having their breasts caressed (and nothing else).  I got really tired of that one.

  9. Liz says:

    I was a bit confused reading that. I thought Palmer was having a little foray into teh gayness with Max being a superseductive lawyer and getting jealous and I didn’t realise it was a Maxine type Max rather than a Maxwell type Max.

    i was too.  from the description of the town, i was really confused since obviously there could be no gay people in Jacobsville, what with no Hispanic people living in a Texas border town.

  10. Castiron says:

    Roslyn, I stand corrected re: community colleges!  Thanks!

    hand88—either something about pianos, or the number of times the heroine slapped away the hero’s hand?

  11. willaful says:

    Also disappointed that there the sudden titilating appearance of homoeroticism in DP was just a Big Misunderstanding.

    Scary thing… I read this one. A bit over a year ago. I have an amazing memory for books and yet, not one of these plot points has stuck with me.

    boys74—I was wishin’!

  12. DreadPirateRachel says:

    This is one of the more truly awesome reviews I’ve read lately. Just the thing to wake me up on a quiet morning at work, which is, incidentally, at a Community College. We have a total of maybe 20 international students. On a good day.

    Maybe Jacobsville Community College has a really great athletics program! *snort*

  13. Liz says:

    just remembered that my 1 and only Diana Palmer was actually a gift from what i am sure was a well-meaning family member that knew i liked reading romance novels.  i got maybe 5 pages in before i had to stop reading: she had paired a 36 year old man with a 21 year old girl—it was a little too icky for my 19 year old brain to imagine…hell it is still slightly icky to my 23 year old brain.

  14. Kristina says:

    Ummm ok…. is it weird that through this entire review I was imagining the voice of Mike Myers (SNL, Waynes World) reading this at a very fast speed with dramatic pauses????

    BTW, LMAO many times.  Thanks Noni. 

    I do have to admit though that all through my formative years I was a HUGE Diana Palmer fan.  I have every single one of her books (I think) up to about 2000…. then I left the romance genre behind for awhile.  Since I bought my Kindle I’ve downloaded serveral of her books but I just cant bring myself to read them!!  My maturity has ruined a good ass-hat abusive romance novel forever for me. 

    Thanks for the laughter, love ya!!

  15. RebeccaJ says:

    Looks like Diana has changed her ways a little bit from when I gave up reading her books about Texas.  Back then, all those virginal girls had their first orgasms from having their breasts caressed (and nothing else).  I got really tired of that one.

    OMG, Karen, that is so true!

    BTW, Nonnie, have you ever heard from Diana about your reviews?

  16. Julia Sullivan says:

    Those are the most clueless terrorists in the entire world.  What are they from, the Circus Clowns’ Liberation Front?  A LADY JUST STABBED HERSELF WITH A TINY KNIFE SHE MUST BE DEAD LET US RUN MY COMRADES!

    And I don’t understand—were they The Reconquista, or were they “Arabic”?  Are there two groups of terrorists running around in this tiny town?

  17. KMont says:

    Yep, pile me onto the large pile of folks who thought Max was a guy – and found it awesome! Other than that, great review. Having new tear ducts installed cuz old ones shorted out.

  18. susan says:

    I’ve never read Diana Palmer, but after this I will read every review that Nonnie writes.

  19. Mindy Holt says:

    I am new to this site and so this is the first thing I have read.
    I laughed so hard. Diana Palmer was one of the first Romance writers I read and I loved probably the first 15. Then of course I started noticeing umm the above rules for Diana Palmer books and also the interesting facts about the poor town of Jacobsville.
    I stopped reading b/c I even started to notice continuity and editing errors. It breaks my heart not to read them though… call it teenage nostalgia.
    Thank you for the cliff notes version above and the little bit of snot that came out of my nose while laughing.

  20. Julie M says:

    OMG! This was so “expletive”ingly awesome. I still won’t read Diana Palmer but I will be looking for more reviews by Nonnie.

  21. Suze says:

    And I don’t understand—were they The Reconquista, or were they “Arabic”?  Are there two groups of terrorists running around in this tiny town?

    Or were they a new, radical group of South American Catholic-Islamic Jihadists?  Or perhaps disgruntled Middle Eastern, Hispanic…um.  Re-conquistadors?  No, wait!  It’s the FLQ!  They’re back, and they’re meaner, badder, and tanner than before!  And in Texas, because why not?

    I guess it’s enough that they’re vaguely foreign.  Because you know those vaguely foreign types are always up to no good.

    was85 – you know, I think the last time I read a Diana Palmer was in 1985.

  22. Lily says:

    Please tell me laughing this hard counts as a workout!

    Pure genius as far as reviews go.

  23. Tamara Hogan says:

    I suppose you want all my monies now, hoor!

    So is she pregnant? WHO KNOWS. All we know is that she can’t kill ants!

    OMG, I’m gonna pee my pants here.  Quick, someone pass me a Poise.

  24. Loved your review. I almost picked this book up cuz I use to read Diana Palmer. But after skimming it, even this was too cheesy for me.

    There is a 95% chance biscuits will be involved.

    Women’s rights are a nebulous, easily dismissed issue.

    The hero will be at least 12 years older than the heroine, who is more often than not between 18 and 23 years old.

    The heroine has an 85% chance of getting pregnant the first time they do it, and will know she is pregnant in minutes (due to an aversion to the smell of bacon).

    This is so true! And this small town of Jacobsville has an incredible amount of hot ex-mercenary/security consultant/miltary/rancher/rich as Midas men. If they weren’t so stupid, I’d wish I lived in this town.

  25. Tiff says:

    Blech. The only other Diana Palmer I’ve read is Heart of Stone.  And when I say read, I mean threw across the room several times before I forced myself to finish it.

  26. Aleyna says:

    i got maybe 5 pages in before i had to stop reading: she had paired a 36 year old man with a 21 year old girl—it was a little too icky for my 19 year old brain to imagine…hell it is still slightly icky to my 23 year old brain.

    This part never seems to bother me…but then again, I always seem to go for the older men.  There’s just something about them!  *pant pant pant*

  27. Mel says:

    Awe.Some. Review!!  I don’t need to read the book to snort milk out of my nose with laughter—the review’s done that well enough.

  28. AAARRGH!!!  I JUST got the “give me back my filet-o-fish” earworm out of my head, only to have “hold me closer Tony Dancer” get stuck in there.

    Nooooeeesss!

    Great review, Nonnie 🙂

  29. Tamara Hogan says:

    “give me back my filet-o-fish”

    AAAhh!  DAMN IT!  Make it go awaaaayyyyyy.

  30. Throwmearope says:

    Mocking Diana Palmer is like shooting fish in a barrel, you guys.

  31. RebeccaJ says:

    This part never seems to bother me…but then again, I always seem to go for the older men.  There’s just something about them!  *pant pant pant*

    Never bothered me either. My husband is ten years older than I am. Now it doesn’t seem to matter, but when I was 19 and he was almost 30, my dad was having fits…LOL!  I LOVE older men!

  32. DONNA says:

    I’m of the opinion that Diana Palmer made a template in 1972, wrote 156 versions of the same story & sends them to her editor (who was hired 1957 & hasn’t left their desk since) whenever she needs a new car or a tuition payment.  I out grew these about the same time I got to the age of her heroinnes – and that was a LONG time ago.

  33. JamiSings says:

    @Suze – I know how it works, I just have an objection to it for ME. Moral reasons is the closest I can come to it. I have Polycystic ovary syndrome which, while it can be treated and all, from everything I’ve read it seems that getting pregnant can be hard to impossible. So there’s a part of me that thinks if I’m “fated” to get pregnant no matter how it comes about, I should just accept it. After all, it might be my only chance.

    Course it’s a moot point as I’m not sexually active nor dating.

  34. JamiSings says:

    @Liz

    she had paired a 36 year old man with a 21 year old girl—it was a little too icky for my 19 year old brain to imagine…hell it is still slightly icky to my 23 year old brain.

    See, I can handle that part. Probably because I’ve always been into older guys. Even now at 33 I find myself lusting after guys in their 60s. And NOT for any of the reasons people think. I just get along better with older men. We have more in common. Seriously. Maybe it’s because my parents didn’t shell out for cable when I was a kid and I ended up growing up on things like I Love Lucy, The Lone Ranger, and The Smothers Brothers. Or my love for big band and disco music. My old fashion ways. Whatever it is – guys my age or younger I cannot get along with and I even find them slightly repulsive.

    The rest however – eh, I’ll never read a Palmer book, that’s for sure!

  35. LaVonne says:

    Wait, I didn’t see a grade on this review.  Is that an A- then?

    That is the funniest review I have read in a LONG time.  I have never read a Diana Palmer but I might have to check one out.  I mean, a small Texas town overrun with drug dealers, terroritsts and ex-military/black ops guys, plus heroines who can’t kill ants.  What’s not to love?!!

  36. donna says:

    and Tara L – true story. Our Ukranian male surg assistant came out to the desk one day, held up his hand & asked, “Ladies, please, is this six inches?”  Every woman in the office stopped dead, looked everywhere but at him then left the immediate vicinity & burst out laughing. I had to explain to him why we were unable to answer that question with any accuracy.

  37. Ciara says:

    SNORT. That was hill-arious. Thank you!

  38. Brain-damaged heroines and the mercenaries who love them enough to rape them on a first date….

    And after all that drama, there was no insta-pregnancy to go with the insta-pregnancy angst? Good job that Jared always wore a little rubber thing on his cock when he fucked all those other non-brain damaged virgins, or they’d have had to have the awkward ‘is it herpes or just a yeast infection?’ discussion too.

    I’ve read gorilla rape mpreg that’s more plausible than this.

  39. robinjn says:

    Just in case, for anyone who hasn’t yet read it, (I know at least one person said they were new on the site); the One. The Only. Pregnesia review by Nonnie.

    http://www.smartbitchestrashybooks.com/index.php/weblog/comments/pregnesia-by-carla-cassidy-guest-review/

  40. Tina C. says:

    Suze said:

    No, wait!  It’s the FLQ!  They’re back, and they’re meaner, badder, and tanner than before!

    That made me literally laugh out loud. (Especially when you imagine it said in some announcer-type voice.)

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