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Reviews for Family Feud

 Family Feud magazine reviews

The average rating for Family Feud based on 2 reviews is 3.5 stars.has a rating of 3.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2012-01-15 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Tash Fjdisl
Okay I wasn't bowled over by this book instead it was just average and I had a hard time with many things, first off the heroine came off as a snob in the beginning, coming back after years with the perception that she would run the family hotel but what she doesn't know her father sold it to the hero, who is famous for a chain of cheap, affordable motels, of course that is not classy and the hero decides that he will tell her the news in his own time, meanwhile he starts romancing her and feels something deep for her. The heroine slowly comes out of her shell and falls for him and the hero tries to rush her into marrying him before the truth gets out. I didn't like how she forgave him so easily for the deception and I didn't feel the hero was apologetic.
Review # 2 was written on 2010-11-16 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars Andres Carciente
After all of that British historical stuff, it's amazing how well Author Susan Carroll captures America of the 1990s. Her dialogue, locale, knowledge of the period, and characters are very convincing. You'd think she actually lived in Rock Island, Illinois. Seriously, though, regardless that I have definite preference to historical romance or those with some sort of fantastic element, Carroll's work generally excels, and Love Power lived up to expectations. This novel's humor and lack of pretentiousness makes it enjoyable to read even if it misses some of the elements that usually attract me. Him: a 30-something, fantastic-looking, well-muscled babe, who owns a local gym and loves Gilbert and Sullivan. Her: a 27-year-old professional woman who lives for her engineering career and lost track of the finer things in life. Liana Malone goes to a company charity ball and wins a raffle where the grand prize is a month course with a personal trainer, Jake Powers. Liana initially wants to refuse the prize (she thought it would be a microwave oven), but after being caught in a snow storm with Jake, she feels she has no other choice but to go through with it when he subsequently "double-dog dares" her. The plotline sizzles with sexual tension from Liana and Jake's first meeting. As always, Carroll masters at putting her viewpoint characters in the hot seat and keeps the reader wondering what's going to happen next. The story progresses smoothly as one scene leads to the next without feeling contrived. This 1994 book has few supporting characters, who sometimes do little except clutter other stories. The mysterious Xavier Storm makes an appearance, linking this one to the other two short novels Carroll did for Harlequin, Black Lace and Linen and Parker and the Gypsy. Her male characters are just as well drawn as her female. Jake has his own insecurities. Perhaps one of their best exchanges comes early in the story when he's leaning over the exposed engine of his stalled van. When she asks what's wrong, she tells him that being a woman doesn't mean she knows nothing about cars. "Just because I'm a man you don't have to assume I do," Jake replies. It's fun following Liana and Jake as they try to resist their mutual attraction. Most of the growth is in Liana, who learns what an empty existence her life has been. Jake overcomes some of his own shortcomings when he believes Liana really does love him. This story is reminiscent of Carroll's earlier Regency romances in that it has a fun-spirited light touch. However, Love Power does rate as the corniest title ever used for any of her novels.


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