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Wednesday, March 14, 2018

Book Review Collision Point (Brute Force #1) by Lora Leigh

Collision Point (Brute Force, #1)
Title: Collision Point (Brute Force #1)

Author: Lora Leigh

Stars: 2 1/2 stars

Review:
The story takes a back seat to talking about sex, dreaming about sex and sex. Collision Point will have readers confused as they read about Riordan and Amara who seem to have come out of no were. The story isn't a stand alone even though there is no story before it. Readers will feel as if they should already know the different characters as well as what introduced to the story. 
The main story is lost in the sex scenes that seem to dominate the story to the point of distraction.  Amara isn't feisty as she is more annoying and Riordan is more of a over sex teenager than a grown adult.
The story will leave readers confused, lost and bored.
Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for the advance copy.

Synopsis:

Riordan “Rory” Malone is a force to be reckoned with. A member of the Brute Force Protection Agency and an operative working with the Elite Ops, Rory is the fiercest of warriors and protectors. Honed from the strong Irish stock of their grandfather and sharpened to a razor’s edge, Malone men live for one single purpose: to protect the women who own them, body and soul. From the moment he saw Amara Resnova, he knew she could be that woman.

But Amara, daughter of an alleged notorious crime lord, is a force in her own right. When she betrays her father, she’s finds herself in the arms of a man who is dangerous for her body and soul.

Can Rory keep Amara safe while protecting his own heart? Can Amara trust Rory not to break hers even as the danger mounts, threatening to take them and their passion to a breaking point?


Mass Market Paperback336 pages

Published February 27th 2018 by St. Martin's Press

About The Author:
Lora Leigh
Lora Leigh lives in the rolling hills of Kentucky, often found absorbing the ambience of this peaceful setting. She dreams in bright, vivid images of the characters intent on taking over her writing life, and fights a constant battle to put them on the hard drive of her computer before they can disappear as fast as they appeared. Lora’s family, and her writing life co-exist, if not in harmony, in relative peace with each other. Surrounded by a menagerie of pets, friends, and a teenage son who keeps her quick wit engaged, Lora’s life is filled with joys, aided by her fans whose hearts remind her daily why she writes.

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