*** 3 1/2 stars ***
Corey McKinney travels to the Amazon on a research mission for her church, which is considering funding a reserve that helped the local Native populations. She is supposed to check out the reserve and bring back a report. Her pilot to the reserve is very rough looking man who insults her and tells her she should just go home because the jungle is no place for a woman. Asher Adams is an American ex-pat who went to Brazil looking for his missing brother and has stayed ever since. He doesn't want Corey there because he thinks she is just a "Lilly-Libber" who is coming to try to force her religion on a native population that neither needs it nor wants it. He also knows how dangerous the jungle can be and doesn't think she can hack it even for a week.
Ash takes Corey to the reserve, which consists of one house where he also lives. The man she was supposed to meet left unexpectedly, so she is stuck with Ash. They don't get off on the right foot, partially because he was a jerk to her and because she acted stuck up and snooty. Corey spends the rest of a very adventurous week with Ash, including visiting a local Indian tribe and treking through the jungle with spiders that fell on her when it rained (holy crap I would have freaked out). As they spend more time together, Corey starts to notice that Ash is more than just a sarcastic bad boy, he is helping the local tribes and using his joking to hide a sensitive side. Ash thinks Corey is beautiful but too fragile for the Amazon, so he fights his attraction and tries to be honorable - but of course they give in and some jungle loving goes down. But Ash loves the Amazon and won't leave and Corey has to return to her small town in America, so how can they have a future?
This book gave me mixed feelings. I liked some parts but others could have been better. The setting of the Amazon jungle was really neat, the author didn't try to romanticize it too much and mentions the diseases and dangers that abound. The lead characters were too black and white - the hero is a bad boy who had a harsh childhood in a foster home, he smokes, drinks whiskey and OMG has a tattoo (that says Born to Raise Hell that he got one night when he passed out drunk - that was actually funny). The heroine is a pristine girl who never drinks, lives in a small town and is a "good" girl. Their differences were pointed out again and again and again - yes it got old. The story really felt dated, you could tell it was written in the 80's by the clothing styles and the story. I was annoyed with the heroine sometimes for being such a Ms. Priss and judging the hero, she comes off as really immature sometimes. The hero would go from being a total jerk (standard 80's style) to being nice sometimes, but she loves him (after a few days of course) because she thinks he has the heart of a child - yeah I don't know what that means either. He was kind of funny and charming in a rough way though.
So overall, the story and setting were interesting enough. If you are feeling like reading a decent throwback 80's book, this would be a good one. The characters could have had more depth and not been drawn so polarizing but they were still interesting.