Title: Rush
Author: Maya Banks
Publisher: Berkley Trade (05 February 2013)
ISBN: 978-0425267042
Reviewer(s): Michael and Jane
Prepare yourselves. Michael and I decided to read and review Rush in tandem. And let’s just say that we had, er, pretty strong reactions to it. Warning: it’s a general winter of discontent below the fold and we only just refrained from using SHOUTY CAPITALS in our respective reviews. Buckle up.
MICHAEL’S TAKE …
First off, let me say this. Maya Banks has been doing this for a while now. I don’t really think this is her version of Fifty Shades of Grey despite the fact that it did sort of feel that way. (Oh, and if you don’t want spoilers, don’t read this because this is a fully-fledged rant.) Having said that, she has accomplished something I wouldn’t have thought possible: created a male lead in Gabe Hamilton that makes Christian Grey and Gideon Cross (Bared to You) look like normal, well-adjusted, thoughtful young men.
Gabe is in the hotel business. He and his partners, Jace and Ash, have been friends since college and seem to collectively be this generation’s Conrad Hilton. They are all thirty-eight and none of them have settled down – making all three eminently eligible bachelors. Well, actually, Gabe was married to Lisa for a while. And while we don’t find out much about it, it was some sort of power exchange relationship where he made all of the decisions. Until the day she decided to leave him and ran to a divorce attorney and the press painted their relationship as abusive. She got a hefty settlement when he didn’t fight her.
Since then, Gabe has avoided romantic entanglements. Oh, he has relationships but they all have a contractual component. Every woman he sleeps with has to sign his combination Slave Contract Non-disclosure Agreement. After that, he and his chosen paramour get physical for a while but never more than six months before he moves on.
So then he runs into Mia. Jace’s little sister. A twenty-four-year-old who seems to have gotten an MBA or at least a business degree but is waitressing at a pastry shop. Sweet little Mia who was raised from childhood by her big brother after their parents were killed. And it turns out he was wanted her for years. Long enough that he has now decided that a fourteen-year age difference doesn’t matter as much as it did when she was twenty or sixteen or whatever.
So he goes to Jace and explains to him that he wants to use and abuse his baby sister for the next six months or so. Oh, wait, no, he doesn’t. That probably wouldn’t work out very well.
So he goes to Mia and explains to her that he wants to use and abuse her for an unspecified period of time. Oh, and she really should have career goals so she can be his assistant so he can do the using and abusing right in his office. As long, of course, as she signs up to be his NDA’d sexual submissive. So at this point she files a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Oh, wait, no, she doesn’t. But she probably should have.
So a bunch of stuff happens and then Gabe and Mia end up in a hotel room in Paris with three prospective business partners. In order to prove to himself that he doesn’t have feelings for his best friend’s little sister he binds and essentially tosses her to the wolves – after setting a few ground rules.
There are roughly five kinds of men:
1. The kind whose personal code would, for moral and religious reasons, make them want to leave.
2. Those who prefer other guys to women.
3. Guys who aren’t really Doms but aren’t going to pass up an interesting opportunity.
4. Actual Doms who delight in the joy of a submissive woman.
5. Abusers who won’t hesitate to hurt women to make themselves feel superior.
The thing is, it is mighty hard to tell which is which just by looking at someone. The fact that Gabe assumed that these three potential investors were 3s and 4s was idiotic. I don’t even think scenarios 1 and 2 entered his head. But you don’t take a chance on having a 5 in the room. That was one of the most boneheaded moves I have ever seen.
And I have to say that Mia was part of the problem. Being submissive is one thing. Letting someone walk on the fine line of being abusive (assuming you don’t think that Gabe crossed the line) is something else. Later on, Jace worries that her next boyfriend might actually be abusive as a result of her time with Gabe; if only the latter had given as much thought to what was going on.
Honestly, my favorite moment was when Jace punched Gabe out. Because someone needed to. Of course, it didn’t actually knock any sense into him. That would have to come later.
I did kind of like the ending but I am still thinking Gabe may need a couple of decades or so of therapy.
I actually pre-ordered the next book, Rush, which will be featuring Jace. I am curious to see how he and Ash fare from an outsider perspective. Because even if they were kind of the guardian angels in this one, they probably won’t be in their own stories.
JANE’S TAKE …
My Rush reading experience can pretty much be summarised by my Goodreads ‘in progress’ status updates and ranty emails:
Status update 1: “9% in and the words ‘steel’, ‘minx’ and ‘kitten’ have been used. :-/”
Status update 2: “Oh, for the love of Pete: ‘There is no negotiation’. REALLY?”
Status update 3: “Rapidly losing the will to live reading this. I’m so not absorbed that I’m watching clips of Scottish Terrier puppies on YouTube every few pages to try and boost my flagging spirits.”
[Pause in reading]
@Michael: “Are you going to finish this or what?”
@Jane: “I’ve stalled … I got partway through, got cross, skimmed the last bit, got even more cross, and then put it down. I really do need to finish it though. It’s dreadful and deserves my full wrath.”
[Michael starts reading]
@Michael: “Wow! I am still not sure what to make of it but if Jace kills Gabe with his bare hands when they get to New York I think I could let him off for temporary insanity if I were on the jury.”
@Jane: “So you’ve been to Paris, then? … Gabe is a total sh*t. The term ‘control freak’ seems most appropriate. And for the love of a flogger, why the HELL would you invite business associates to Top your ‘beck and call girl’? Because, let’s be honest, that’s what she is.
The thing that really irks me though? Maya Banks writes so bloody nicely. There’s just something about the flow and rhythm of her prose that appeals to me. It’s why I keep buying her. But her actual characterisation and interactions are so hit and miss. I haven’t felt this cross about a male protagonist of hers since Micah (Sweet Temptation). I mean, come on! Contrast this idiot with Damon from Sweet Persuasion.
@Michael: “I couldn’t understand what could upset you so much but when I got to that scene I understood. This guy makes Christian Grey and Gideon Cross look stable.”
@Jane: “I think our joint review of this is going to turn into a joint rant …”
Um, yeah, it kind of did. If you don’t find narcissistic, wankerish men off-putting in an erotic romance then you’ll probably like this. Because that’s exactly what Gabe is. The writing’s solid, though, and that’s what stops it from becoming a total bust. I quite liked Jace and Ash as characters, too, although the way this series has started I’m tempted to lay money on them turning into total morons during the next two books.
Series prediction:
- Book two = ménage meltdown. Jace decides he can’t share his women with Ash anymore. Ash can’t decide what to do with his penis now he’s on his own.
- Book three = Ash has ménage withdrawal but has to ‘rescue’ Caroline from her bouncer boyfriend and in the process emerges from his DP funk.
Roll on Fever.
Rush tickle your fancy? Click on the following links to purchase a copy:
Amazon.co.uk
Amazon.com
Kobo
As always, both of you wrote fantastic reviews! I have been falling off the Maya Banks band wagon lately, so may pass this one up.
Great joint rant, so succinctly summed up.
Particularly loved the ‘are you going to finish this or what?’
Nothing quite like a bit on online nagging…
Have enjoyed Maya Banks in the past but not one for me this time
Can you do another joint read please? I enjoyed reading both view points/rants.
ps Jane, one of my life mantras is ‘life’s too short to finish a book you’re really not enjoying especially when there are so many good reads out there’ – and besides I think Michael pretty much said it all
Yeah, I’m going to speak to Michael about another joint review. We quite enjoyed doing this one.
I was actually the first to finish Rush – Michael was trying to keep me on task when he noticed how long I was taking to read it :-). Sometimes, if something is superbad, I feel compelled to keep going just to see how terrible it is overall …
Am awaiting joint reviews…no pressure.
Surely if it’s superbad it’s not going to get any better/worse overall?
What makes it bad for you – plot/character development? For me it has to be grammar/punctuation/lack of continuity and trying to work out where or what someone is doing – I hate it when you have to re-read just to work out if he is taking her from behind/inverted/69 or just plain missionary!
I totally agree; if it’s bad, it never gets better. Ever!
I think I have the train-wreck mentality, i.e. can’t look away from fiction catastrophes, no matter how horrendous :-/ Having said that, though, grammar and/or punctuation issues will cause me to abandon a book immediately. Clumsy prose, continuity errors and poor editorial choices will, too.
Books that fall into my ‘dreadful but I’m still reading it bucket’ are usually well-written but have one or all of the following:
- ridiculous or hackneyed plots
- too-stupid-to-live characters
- crazy-sauce justifications for protagonists behaving like complete twits.
Ok, name one in each category! I want/need to know which ones you persevered with to the bitter end…
Wow. Pressure. Okay …
- Ridiculous plot: Wild Card by Lora Leigh.
- Too-stupid-to-live character: Marissa from Lover Revealed. She was like nails on a blackboard. I like the Black Dagger Brotherhood series but I hated this particular book. And I was annoyed that Butch and V didn’t end up together …
- Crazy sauce justification: I can only have anal sex with a woman because she might die and get pregnant. Yes, I’m looking at YOU Deke from Decadent. I bought this after reading the hilarious Smart Bitches review a few years back (http://smartbitchestrashybooks.com/blog/decadent_by_shayla_black). I knew going in it would be completely cock-eyed and all I can remember of it is this now famous bit of dialogue: “F*cking her ass. Saving her life.”