Reviews

Big Guns Out of Uniform by Nicole Camden, Liz Carlyle, Sherrilyn Kenyon

kathydavie's review against another edition

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4.0

This is an anthology of stories about men in uniform and mildly erotic.

Series
"BAD to the Bone" (B.A.D. Agency, 0.25)

The Stories
Sherrilyn Kenyon's "BAD to the Bone" uses the Fantasy Island backdrop for this story about a Midwestern schoolteacher winning this month's "live out your fantasy from a book" contest. It's so cute [& homey!] how Kenyon creates an everyday woman who gets to live out her fantasy AND meet the love of her life.

This one involves Kyle recuperating on the B.A.D. side of the island, recovering from five or six gunshots — there's some dispute between the docs as to just how many. Marianne Webernec is the thirty-ish schoolteacher. Short, plain, a bit overweight, and she's won the chance to play out one of her favorite scenes! Ooh, baby, I wanna know how she managed to winnow it down to just one!

Lily Carlyle's "Let's Talk About Sex" is sooo cute! I just love this one.

Dr. Delia Sydney has her fingers in all sorts of…pies. And Sgt. Nick Woodruff knows at least her voice from her radio show, Let's Talk About Sex.

Nicole Camden's "Nekkid Truth" is a half-and-half for me. The story itself is great, but Deborah Valley's handicap is so depressing. I think it hits a little too close to home for me.

Anyway, Deb started making a living by shooting crime scenes for the cops, and through her handicap, became interested in shooting body parts. She became good enough that her photos of how she sees the human body are in gallery showings, and she's made herself a nice reputation. It's not enough of course. What Deb really wants is a chance with Detective Scott. She's already thrown herself at him once and been shot down. She is not going to open herself up like that again…

The Cover and Title
The cover is cute with the tight backside of a man half in uniform, gun on his right, another case on his back left hip obviously with his arms around a woman. The same woman with her arms casually around his neck, one hand clasping the brim of his policeman's hat.

The title certainly is appropriate for each hero seems to carry a Big Gun when he's Out of Uniform.

romancejunkie1025's review against another edition

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5.0

i only read the first two stories so my rating is based solely on those. Definitely an awesome set or stories. Another wonderful Kenyon story and Carlyle is definitely going on my list of fav authors i cant wait to find more of her stories in my book treasure trove.

anzuk's review against another edition

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2.0

Just two stars because I only liked one story out of three.
"BAD to the Bone" - BORING!
"Let's Talk About Sex" - Not bad.
"The Nekkid Truth" - I couldn't even complete this one. Debbie was too vulgar for me to handle and I didn't click AT ALL with the story.

mrsherrera's review

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3.0

BAD to the Bone - Sherrilyn Kenyon

familiar_diversions's review

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3.0

I bought this book years ago, back when I was a huge Sherrilyn Kenyon fan and would read anything of hers I could get my hands on, even though I preferred her paranormals. This was technically a reread, but I only remembered Kenyon's story and the premise of Camden's story. Carlyle's story was a complete blank - absolutely nothing about it was familiar to me.

I recalled this being a so-so read for me, even back when I first read it. My romance reading tastes have changed a lot over the years, so I was curious to see how well this would hold up for me.

"BAD to the Bone" by Sherrilyn Kenyon

Marianne is a teacher who won a fantasy getaway in a contest. She gets to spend a week on an island, pretending to be the gorgeous heroine of her favorite romance novel while acting out scenes from the book. She'd been excited for the actor playing Brad, the book's hero, to sweep her off her feet, but the one who actually does that is Kyle, an agent from BAD (Bureau of American Defense) who's recuperating from a recent mission on the other half of the island.

Oh man, this story's premise was cringey. I can't imagine one of these "Hideaway Heroine Sweepstakes" going well. It's one thing to fantasize about your favorite romance hero. It's another to go on a real getaway with the expectation that the actor playing your favorite romance hero might seduce you. It wasn't stated flat out like that, but it was clear that the reality of the getaway (bad acting, plus edited scenes that avoid all sexual moments) did not impress Marianne.

Kyle was one of Kenyon's "tough guys who secretly want to settle down with someone sweet and ordinary but don't feel like they deserve that life." The story's length meant she didn't have a lot of time and space to establish the character dynamics, so aspects of it felt a little rushed, even though there was enough humor and warmth to make the results appealing. We had Kyle both falling instantly in love with Marianne and telling her that she was beautiful, and also thinking to himself that she was fairly ordinary and not particularly beautiful.

Readers were assured that Kyle really wanted an ordinary life with an ordinary woman, but I had trouble imagining what he'd do with himself once he followed Marianne home. BAD seemed to be his entire life. Still, this was pure fluff written in a reasonably enjoyable way.

"Let's Talk About Sex" by Liz Carlyle

Dr. Delia Sydney has a radio show in which she gives callers sex-related advice. Her recent divorce makes her feel a bit like a fraud, but she also definitely doesn't miss her ex - he's the one who left her with a mortgage she can't afford. Until she can manage to sell her house, she somehow has to convince her piece of junk car to keep working. Thankfully, Nick, her cop neighbor, offers to help her out.

I'm not really a fan of "heroine job involves sex in some way and is therefore inherently sexy" romance setups, and I don't think it was handled all that well here. An attempt was made: at one point in their relationship, Delia asked Nick to stop bringing up callers to her radio station during their own flirting and sex. She told him that that was her work, and she didn't consider her work to be sexy. I really liked that moment, but then it was ruined when Nick called Delia's radio station and, using a fake name, essentially flirted with her on-air by asking her a question that was really about her. If I had been Delia, I'd have been pissed, but for some reason she didn't seem to think there was anything wrong with what he did. They certainly never talked about it afterward.

On the plus side, the relationship progression was more believable than in the first story - no instalove, and I could actually imagine them as a couple with a future.

"The Nekkid Truth" by Nicole Camden

Years ago, an accident robbed Debbie of her ability to recognize faces, even her own. She got a job as a crime scene photographer and is now famous in the art world for her nude photography. She also has a private photograph collection: dick pics of all the men who have been her lovers. The man she really wants to be with, though, is Detective Marshall Scott. Unfortunately, he keeps her at arm's length - maybe for the best, since she isn't sure whether someone who can't recognize the face of their own mother could ever really love someone.

Whereas Kenyon's story was pure fluff and even Carlyle's was pretty light, Camden's story had a heaviness to it. The first half, in particular, felt very quiet and reflective, but also weirdly emotionally distant. I think it was part of Camden's efforts to write Debbie's face blindness, so it technically fit the story, but it didn't work for me from a romance perspective. I like my romances more emotionally warm and sweet. The second half of the story delivered that a little more, but overall it wasn't to my taste.

Still, Debbie's face blindness was pretty unique and memorable. The way it was worked into the final scene was nice.

All in all, this collection was okay, but a little odd, ranging in tone from goofy to reflective. It definitely at least had a theme to it: law enforcement officer heroes plus relatively high heat level sex. Unfortunately, considering the limited number of pages the authors had to work with, I sometimes felt like the sex scenes detracted from the time needed to establish that the characters were really in love rather than just in lust and could make a relationship work. Although Kenyon's story was the most fun, it was also the worst in that respect. That said, the other two stories were only so-so reads for me as well.

(Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.)

stephd711's review

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4.0

I only read the Nicole Camden story because I went to college with her. Her story was very original and entertaining.
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