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Book Review of The Iron Rose (Dante Pirates, Bk 2)

The Iron Rose  (Dante Pirates, Bk 2)
rubberducky avatar reviewed on + 79 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 9


This was my very first Marsha Canham book, and it hooked me so thoroughly, I spent the next two weeks finding the prequel to this one, Across a Moonlit Sea - and every other book of hers I could find by nosing through used bookstores & shopping ebay (she has a fairly long out of print list). I hadn't read romances in years before I picked this one up, and my first thought was that romance heroines had drastically changed in the intervening years...

Juliet Dante is a pirate and the captain of her own ship (you guessed it), the Iron Rose. She also happens to be very good at it. I love strong, determined heroines who are driven to excel at whatever it is they do. Trouble is, they usually have a difficult time when it comes to finding men who are their equals, much less surrendering any small measure of their will to those honored few when they do find them. This usually leads to the time-honored (and often dreaded) game of push/pull between the protagonists - something that never fails to bore and irritate if not done well. I'm happy to report that in this case, it was skillfully done, and not the least bit irritating.
Varian St. Clare is Juliet's equal in every way. He's every bit as skilled with a sword, just as strong-willed, and equally determined when it comes to getting what he wants. No surprise, he decides early on that he wants Juliet. I found a great deal to like about Varian. He's all man, but more open to his emotions than your average romance hero. Juliet shouldn't appeal to him beyond a brief romp between the sheets; she's just not the type of girl a guy like him brings home to the stately family manor, and drapes in expensive jewelry and silk ballgowns - she's a pirate! Varian realizes she's Miss Inappropriate, but he also realizes much faster than the average hero that he's in love, and he goes after the object of his affection with enough tenacity & determination to make even the coldest heart skip a beat.
Juliet is a little more pragmatic. She wants him too, but she's not kidding herself that marriage is the logical outcome for a relationship between two people as different as she and Varian. He has a tough time convincing her, but the journey to their HEA is nine-tenths of the fun. Great attention has been paid to historical detail in this novel, the secondary characters are strongly written without being intrusive, and the love scenes are signature Marsha Canham H-O-T. It's a keeper, and one of my top ten most highly recommended historical romances.

Grade: A+
Sensuality Rating: R