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Average rating4
Admiral Philip Guthrie is in an unprecedented position: on the wrong end of the law, leading a ragtag band of rebels against the oppressive Imperial forces. Or would be if he can get his command ship--the derelict cruiser called Hope's Folly--functioning. Not much can rattle Philip's legendary cool--but the woman who helps him foil an assassination attempt on Kirro Station will. She's the daughter of his best friend and first commander--a man who died while under Philip's command and whose death is on Philip's conscience.Rya Bennton has been in love with Philip Guthrie since she was a girl. But can her childhood fantasies survive an encounter with the hardened man, and newly minted rebel leader, once she learns the truth about her father's death? Or will her passion for revenge put not only their hearts but their lives at risk? It's an impossible mission: A man who feels he can't love. A woman who believes she's unlovable. And an enemy who will stop at nothing to crush them both.From the Paperback edition.
Series
3 primary booksDock Five Universe is a 3-book series with 3 primary works first released in 2002 with contributions by Linnea Sinclair and Megan Sybil Baker.
Reviews with the most likes.
http://fantasycafe.blogspot.com/2009/03/review-of-hopes-folly.html
As usual, too much romance for my tastes–but the rest made up for it. I keep reading Sinclair's work, even though it is largely romance, because she also has good plots and does a good job with character development. Unlike many authors, each of her main characters is a well-defined individual, not “another good guy” or “another beautiful-yet-insecure woman.” There was a touch of beautiful-yet-insecure in Rya Bennton (SUCH an annoying clich@eacute;!), but she got past it.
Some of the things that annoy me the most are, apparently, standard romance memes. Having relationship problems just because nobody will say, “Hey, this is what I want and need, how about you?” is fairly realistic, but I'd love to see SOMEBODY in a book who has grown past that.
Anyway, this was a worthy read, and it does stand alone, but everything will make far more sense if you read the earlier books in the same universe.