Flirting With Danger by Claire Baxter
Genre: Contemporary RomancePublisher: Entangled Publishing - Bliss
Date of Publication: September 9, 2013
Number of pages: approx. 190
Cover Artist: Jessica Cantor
Purchase Link: Amazon | BN

Book Description:
To be together is dangerous. To stay apart is impossible.
Firefighter Jasmine Mackinnon has always just been one of the guys. So no one’s more shocked than she is to find herself kissing fellow firefighter and all-around sinfully handsome playboy Aaron Parkes after a friend’s wedding. Jasmine knows she can’t risk an emotional connection with a colleague—a potentially dangerous entanglement when fighting fires together—and nothing's more important to her than her job.
Aaron never noticed how beautiful Jasmine was until he saw her out of her firefighter duds, but there’s something about the fiery woman that tempts him. Though he knows pursuing a real relationship is out of the question for a serial dater like him, when their casual flirtation builds into something more serious, it's not just their jobs or their safety on the line. It's their hearts.
My Thoughts:
"Life was passing her by, and if she didn't do something about it soon, it would be gone before she'd screwed up the courage to get on board."
Jasmine is a firefight, who is "One of the guys" and loves what she does. After a friends wedding the last thing she expects is to feel a connection between Aaron who is known for being a serial dater. Jasmine doesnt want to be another one of his conquests and against her better judgement can't seem to stay away from him. Will Jasmin risk her heart and job to be with Aaron?
I really enjoyed the sweet romance. I loved all the characters. I loved that Jasmine was a strong, smart, independent and caring. I love that even if Aaron was see as a player there was more to him than just the girls he's been with. I want to say more on that but I don't want to ruin the book.I loved the connection between Jasmine and Aaron. I loved that there was the point of view of both, Jasmine and Aaron, it given me a better understanding of what both were going through. It helped me connect with the characters on a deeper level and made the characters feel more real. I found the book to be predictable but still very enjoyable and fun to read.
Overall I enjoyed this fun and romantic book and think you lovely readers will enjoy it. 4 of 5 stars.
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In a bedroom of a sprawling sandstone
house in South Australia, Jasmine Mackinnon looked at the reflection of her
friend and fellow bridesmaid, who was peering over her shoulder.
Sasha said, “You should wear that smoky eye shadow more
often. It makes your eyes look enormous.”
“I get plenty of smoke on my face when I’m on a call-out. I
don’t need to add more.”
“No, not when you’re at work, obviously,” Sasha said as she straightened. “But you could make an
effort when we go out.”
Jasmine winced. “I do
make an effort.”
“Oh, I know. I didn’t mean it like that.” Sasha pulled an
apologetic face. “Okay, maybe I did, but I was trying to be helpful. You’re so
pretty, but you don’t make the most of what you have. Look, what I mean is that
you might find your Mr. Right if you went for a more feminine look.”
Marrying a man she loved, having babies, watching them grow
up, staying together forever…that was the fairy tale for most women, her
friends included. But how often did it actually happen? The staying together
forever bit, anyway.
Not very often, in Jasmine’s experience. She hoped Leanne and
Michael, today’s bride and groom, would make it, but it wasn’t a risk she was
prepared to take for herself. Not unless she found a man she could trust
completely, and they were few and far between.
Sighing, she said, “If I find a man to love me as I am, then
great. But I’m not going to pretend to be something I’m not.”
Jasmine studied her reflection as the makeup artist blended
blush beneath her cheekbones. Which made her look as if she actually had cheekbones. She’d bet that, given a
choice between muscles and makeup on their women, most men would not choose muscles. But messing around
with all those brushes and jars—it just wasn’t her style. Any man she allowed
into her life would have to want the real her no matter what she did or didn’t
slap on her face.
Sasha was on a roll now. “Okay, I can see your point, but
first impressions are important, aren’t they? You need to get past the first
hurdle before you can really get to know someone. All I’m saying is, you might
meet more men if you looked as if you cared what they thought of you. And you
could be a bit more encouraging when men do
try to talk to you. You could give them a chance. Like that poor man in the pub
last week.”
Jasmine swiveled the chair. “What man?”
“The one with the Johnny Depp jaw.”
She screwed up her eyes. “Can’t say I remember him.”
“He came over to talk to us. To you, anyway.”
“Oh! You mean when we were watching the game on the big
screen?”
“Yes.”
“I didn’t notice his jaw; I was too busy paying attention to
the football.”
“Trust me, he was cute. And he tried to start a conversation
with you.”
Jasmine frowned. “Did he?”
“He asked you what you did for a living.”
She nodded. “That’s right. I remember.”
“And what did you say?”
“Er…female impersonator.”
“My point exactly. No wonder he took off like he’d been spat
out.”
“The scores were level. It was a crucial point.”
The door of the en-suite bathroom opened and Leanne, the
bride, emerged, wrapped in a toweling robe, and, like Jasmine and Sasha,
sporting large rollers in her hair. “What did I miss?”
“I was just telling Jasmine that she frightens men off when
they try to talk to her.”
Nodding, Leanne pulled up a chair. “Well, it’s not really her
fault that she intimidates them, is it? She’s so…”
“Capable,” Sasha supplied.
“Hello. I’m still in the room.” Jasmine frowned. “And since
when was being capable a bad thing?”
“It’s not, generally, but you don’t give men a chance to be men around you.”
“Oh, that’s rubbish.”
“No, it’s true,” Leanne said. “You’re good at most things
they’d consider men’s stuff. Heck, you can probably bench press more than some
of them. You even do a job that a lot of men wouldn’t have the guts to do. You
make them feel inadequate.”
“And we love you for it,” Sasha added. “You know that, don’t
you?”
Jasmine nodded. Her friendship with Leanne and Sasha went
back as long as she could remember, and she’d never doubt their motives for a
moment.
“We’re just saying that it’s going to be tough for you to
find a man who’s secure enough in his own masculinity to cope with all that.”
“Unless you’re smart, like me, and marry a firefighter,”
Leanne said with a smile.
“She’s right,” Sasha said. “And there are some good-looking
guys in your station. What about Kane? He’s cute.”
“Cute like a puppy. He’s younger than me.”
“Not by much. All right, how about Aaron, then? Ooh, Aaron.”
Sasha fanned herself. “He has all the right credentials. Tall, dark, and—”
“Dangerous,” Leanne interrupted. “Tall, dark, and dangerous.
Strictly no strings, that’s Aaron Parkes. He could charm the skin off a rice
pudding, but he thinks having breakfast with a woman the morning after is
long-term.”
“Isn’t that what makes him irresistible?” Sasha said. “You
know, the thrill of being the one to hook him? Maybe he just hasn’t found the
right woman yet?”
“He’s not looking,” Jasmine said. “Trust me, he’s happy the
way he is. I should know; I have to listen to him bragging about his conquests
at work. They’re all the same, and they don’t seem to care that he’s only
interested in one thing.”
Leanne shook her head. “Forget about him. I wouldn’t want to
see Jasmine dating Aaron. It could only end in tears, and then we’d have to
kill him”
“I have no intention of dating him,” Jasmine said. She wouldn’t
dream of becoming a notch on Aaron’s bedpost—if there was even any bedpost left
to carve a notch in. “Anyway, there’s no way I’d go out with a colleague at
all. Not Aaron, not anybody. Workplace romances get messy, and in a job like
ours, messy is the last thing we need. We have to be able to rely on each other
in life-threatening situations—would you trust a colleague to save your life if
his girlfriend was in danger as well?” She shook her head. “Of course you
wouldn’t. Plus, dating’s not allowed. Not between people who work in the same
team like Aaron and I do.”
Claire Baxter writes contemporary romantic fiction of all lengths. Her short stories have been published in commercial women's magazines around the world, while her novels have been translated into 20 languages and have been nominated in the Romance Writers of Australia's Romantic Book of the Year Award, the RT Book Reviews Reviewers' Choice Awards, and the Cataromance Reviewers' Choice Awards (Winner, Best Harlequin Romance).
Before following her passion to write full-time, Claire was an award-winning corporate communications manager. Earlier, she worked as a translator and a PA.
Claire grew up in Warwickshire, England, but for more than 20 years has called Australia home. She considers herself lucky to live near one of Adelaide's beautiful metropolitan beaches where she loves to walk and think up stories.
Author Contact
Thanks for the post, Jessica, and for the review. Glad you enjoyed the book!
ReplyDeleteClaire (Baxter)