REVIEW OF AUDIOBOOK; MAY 2013:
I couldn't continue listening because what I did not notice in the print version, I picked up on listening and the result is that I lost respect for Drea and felt sorry and sympathetic towards to Salinas. I didn't even get to the part where Simon meets up with Drea again after getting the assignment to kill her. I had to stop because I was wishing (far too strongly for it to be healthy!) that this is one woman who needs to be taught a darn good lesson before she's killed.
I checked my initial review below to see whether I mentioned anything about my dislike of Drea but I didn't. Anyway, my conclusion of Drea after listening to the audiobook (partway) is that I kept wondering WHY is this woman having this resentful attitude towards Salinas?
Why does she hate him to the point where she's plotting to escape and even steal two million dollars from him? He did not abuse her. On the contrary, he pampered her and kept her in luxury from the time she became his girlfriend/mistress two years ago. She has use of the chauffeur to go wherever she wants and bodyguards to ensure she's safe (hey, they can carry the shopping bags, too:D) and Salinas treats her like she's a precious possession. Moreover, there was nothing in the story that said Drea was abducted by Salinas to be his personal sex slave (Drea should have met Ariel Castro) or that she was with Salinas against her will. On the contrary, Salinas cared about Drea and if he wasn't in love with her, he certainly acted like he loved her.
Drea also knew what kind of man Salinas was when she hooked up with him and if she is really a very smart woman pretending to be a drug-trafficker's bimbo, her attitude is very conflicting and unbelievable. Her charade isn't a cover - she's not an undercover operative - it's for real. In other words, she's done everything that had to be done since she got pregnant at 15 (and lost the baby) just to survive.
To put it nicely, Drea is a gold-digging whore who stumbled onto the good life by latching herself to a wealthy criminal. Now, I don't deny that this little mercenary can have a longing for something more, for love, kids and the white picket fence.
I'd be happy for her to have gotten that from Simon in the end but what I can't, and won't accept, is for her to have two-timed Salinas. Let Salinas get his just desserts for loaning Drea to Simon for that one-night stand...but not via Drea's scheming because she isn't some innocent, naive girl trapped into sexual slavery and abused physically on a regular basis. This shoddy treatment of a man (Salinas) who's kept her in comfort and safety made was what to be the heroine of this romantic suspense into the real villain, with Salinas becoming the unwitting victim.
REVIEW OF 2009 READING:
When I closed this book, I thought it was one of the most feel-good, romantic books I've read this year. I didn't think I'd ever say that about a Linda Howard book these past few years as they'd all been pretty blah.
I knew Death Angel was one I had to buy after reading the excerpt included at the back of Up Close & Dangerous (which I thought was just okay compared to the earlier books which I found very lacking in the romance aspect). Anyway, the assassin fascinated me and my decision to buy the book when it got released was based entirely on that little glimpse of him.
IIRC, someone commented that she found him one-dimensional. I did not at all. He was complex right from the beginning and unlike some other readers, I did not need more information or background about him to bring him to life for me. He was perfect for the story and it was, indeed, a very sweet romance. His own salvation from a mercenary, unfeeling, cold and machine-like existence was heart-warming and I loved the way LH made it happen without long-drawn out passages.
I read some reviews that said he was too cold or that the reviewer wasn't sure if he wouldn't have killed Drea in the end. It was clear (the assassin said so himself) that when he went looking for her, he hadn't made up his mind yet whether he would accept the job and kill her. Of course, the decision wzs taken out of his hands but even at that point, I'll say the reader already knows something is happening inside him; something new is happening for the first time in this hired killer's psyche as he watches Drea die.
So yeah, I liked this book very, very much because of Simon. He did make my own heart ache even with the paucity of words where his characterization is concerned. As for the paranormal element, I still stand by my assertion that it was eye-rolling for me but only because I hate these came-back-from-the-dead plot devices. It's really been done to death even in the movies so I don't want it popping up in my romances, especially from a seasoned author - and unexpectedly. When I learnt Death Angel had this plot device, my groan was loud enough to raise the dead.
Having said that, though, I'm relieved it was just a brief segment in the book so it wasn't long before I got rid of those "Scribe Virgin" type characters that seem to populate these New Agers' view of heaven. I could easily have ripped out those after-death pages and have Drea go through her metamorphosis with the same result. Why? Because even before she died, we already know the Drea with Salinas is not the real Drea underneath. LH does show us that it was a lie Drea covered herself with and that it was deliberate and not of long duration (just 2 years) and it is because Drea was never this bimbo Salinas and everyone else thought she was, that the came-back-from-the-dead experience was unnecessary.
BUT...and this is a big but...it was necessary for the hero's salvation. It was HE who needed to see Drea die before his eyes and THAT was, in his words, the miracle...and it made him go into a chapel.
And cry.
I loved this book.