Skip to main content

Member Reviews

A wonderful, heartwarming novel! I love my own firefighter husband, so reading this book about a firefighter getting his chance at a HEA, was right up my alley! The characters are beautiful, the story line captivating and unique. This author was new to me but definitely has talent and I can't wait for another one! 4 stars and two thumbs up!

Was this review helpful?

Congratulations! Your review for In Love With The Firefighter,
captioned below, has been published. Visit
<http://freshfiction.com/review.php?id=66720> to view your
published review.

Was this review helpful?

As the genre suggests, this is a heartwarming tale. However, there's plenty if heartbreak, trauma and pain to be overcome. And that's just Nicole. Good thing Kevin's around to swipe her car and rescue is in his job description, and so darn hard not to like.
This one will make ya feel, joy of the sun as it meets the sea to end a day, gut gripping fear of loss, love as only a bff or family member can bestow, crippling grief at horrific loss of someone dear, attraction and thrill of the first brush if a new romance, belonging when you finally are home after a long absence or find it in an unexpected place.
Go get this book if you don't already have it. Be sure to grab a tissue or 2 and block out uninterrupted time, and get reading. It'll fly!

Was this review helpful?

I confess the reason I wanted to read Amie Denman’s In Love With the Firefighter was the cute cover. I pride myself on selecting my titles for my precious reading time with the confidence that this is an author I’ll enjoy; ALL are carefully curated. BUT, *throws hands up*, the kitten got me … also the word “firefighter”. I do love a firefighter hero, so much easier to pull off than policemen, or military, so much more convincing as heroes. I admit I was leery of the “heartwarming” label: how saccharine will this be? I’m as guilty as the next romance reader of being addicted to the Hallmark Christmas movie, but I don’t want to watch them year-round. I’m happy to say that Denman’s Firefighter+kitten takes place during a hot Virginia-Beach-like summer in fictional Cape Pursuit and is surprisingly un-saccharine. It opens with firefighter Kevin Ruggles and his firefighting crew barrelling through tourist-heavy streets to reach the site of a fire. Though Kevin is a seasoned rig-driver/firefighter, the call’s urgency sees his fire-truck swerving skills take down a double-parked car’s driver-side door. Said car belongs to newly-arrived-to-Cape-Pursuit heroine, Nicole Wheeler. Their meet-cute is hardly the stuff of romance, more of annoyance, insurance claims, and shame-faced remorse on Kevin’s part.

A job managing her best friend’s art gallery, “See Jane Paint”, has brought Nicole to the coastal-Virginia town. Though the work is modest compared to the position she held in Indianapolis, we learn Nicole leaves behind the heartache of her brother’s loss, grieving parents, an unhappy sister, and job that lost its appeal when her relationship with the company owner fizzled and died. That evening, as Nicole and Jane relax at a local watering-hole, Kevin and his firefighting buddies walk in. Kevin gets Nicole and Jane’s tab and makes it obvious that he is not only contrite about the accident, but very much attracted to Nicole. While Nicole finds the gentlemanly, handsome man attractive, she cannot be involved with a firefighter. She and her family lost her younger brother to a summer job fighting California wild fires only last year. Nicole’s pain and fear are much stronger than any liking and attraction she may have for Kevin. In the meanwhile, Nicole also notices Jane seems to have a strained relationship with Kevin’s partner, Charlie Zimmerman. The two are exchanging awkward glances and yet also circle round each other with amorous interest.

I was pleasantly surprised with how much I enjoyed Denman’s romance. While it had the Hallmark movie’s ensemble cast and low-key-ness, I found Kevin and Nicole sharper and funnier. I found the firefighting rescue scenes exciting and real, described with suspense and a great use of detail. (There’s a fantastic attempted water rescue scene.) Denman neither romanticizes nor glorifies what a firefighter like Kevin does. The dangerous rescue scenes are as real-feeling as the more likely and mundane work that comprises Kevin’s daily routine. Denman also uses Kevin’s work for excellent pacing: the firefighting scenes are interspersed with the development of his and Nicole’s growing feelings for each other. They also serve as a great foil to their relationship. With every Kevin-in-possible-danger scene, while her heart pulls towards Kevin, Nicole’s fear, borne of the pain of her brother’s loss, keeps her cautious and pushes Kevin away.

Every scene also paints Kevin as a great guy, caring, affectionate, funny, loving, and protective of others, without the over-sexed alpha-ness that makes for most contemporary romance heroes. Kevin isn’t angsty and crushed by the break-up of his, as he puts it, one and a half past relationships, but he is a guy who likes commitment, to his job and the woman he wants to be with. He very nicely, also rare in romance, asks Nicole out on a date, like good-old-fashioned wooing, on several occasions. Nicole, I think, is less well-developped, mainly because her fear and how she’s haunted by her brother’s loss makes her a one-note symphony. With the Heartwarming’s length, I thought too often, “come on, girl, get over this”. But that’s churlish of me, grief has no rules and Nicole obviously comes from a close-knit, loving family who would feel this loss deeply. Moreover, Denman shows healing and recovery in Nicole and we can see her inching closer and closer to Kevin’s good-guy offers of love, friendship, care, fidelity, and commitment. Denman also infuses her narrative with some greatly humorous scenes, like a trip to Busch Gardens with Nicole, Kevin, and Kevin’s five- and three-year-old nieces, precocious and really really funny.

Another critique of In Love With the Firefighter is some questionable use of POV. There’s no pernicious first person narration, thank the narrative gods. Instead, Denman tries to balance an alternating focussed point of view between Jane and Nicole and their internal ruminations about Charlie and Kevin, respectively. There were often times I didn’t really know who was thinking what about whom. “What, is this Nicole?” “No, it’s Jane” … and so on like that, too often taking me out of the story. In addition, the prose isn’t impressive and tends, in the first few chapters, to the stilted, but it becomes much smoother and adept as the novel progresses.

On the other hand, kudos to Heartwarming. I enjoyed being in a universe where down-to-earth people think about entering relationships with their heads and hearts, instead of being in a constant state of sexual awareness and run-away-train desire. Where bodies are noticed and admired, but more so are smiles and personalities. Where protagonists proceed relationship-cautiously and yet are honest about their feelings and desires, with themselves and each other. I was delighted with Denman’s In Love With the Firefighter and not only because of the kitten. With Miss Austen, we say that it offers “real comfort,” Emma.

Amie Denman’s In Love With the Firefighter is published by Harlequin Books. It was released on July 3rd and may be found at your preferred vendors. I received an e-ARC from Harlequin Books, via Netgalley.

Was this review helpful?

A fresh start might be just what she needed! With the first book in the Cape Pursuit Firefighters series, we meet Nicole and Kevin. He really likes her, but she's got a major chip on her shoulder. We can understand as we hear her story of why she's got the hang ups that she does, but we hold out hope that nice guy Kevin will be able to sway her to his point of view! The only thing I wasn't overly fond of in the book was that Jane & Charlie's story was stealing the limelight. A classic case of secondary characters being too strong ... they really should have been a separate book all on their own with only hints of the start of something in this one.

Nicole Wheeler is emotionally drained, but she's looking forward to starting fresh here in Cape Pursuit, Virginia. Her college friend Jane has offered her a job just when she needed it most to get away from the heartache of losing her little brother, and she needs to brighten her world up a bit ... and what better way than to meet a man!

Kevin Ruggles doesn't exactly welcome Nicole to town in the usual way, but it doesn't take him long at all to be smitten with her ... only problem is, he has the bad luck of being a firefighter ... the one job she will never find acceptable after it stole her brother from her!

Was this review helpful?

Nicole is still dealing with grief and moved to Cape Pursuit to help out a friend. Thing is the welcome wagon, Kevin driver of the firetruck, included taking off the door to her car as she was carrying things to it. Kevin has all the great qualities in a man including risking his life to save others as a fire fighter, the career that ended up taking the lifer of her brother. Both Nicole and Kevin like eachother but shes having a hard time battling the idea that his career can take him at any moment Nicole don't want to take that risk in getting her heart broken.

As the cover of the book says this is a heart warming book. I liked the characters and getting to know them. I also loved that bit of side romance of her friends POV with another character. It would've been nicer though in my opinion as a seperate side novella. At times I ended up confusing characters because of it. I loved seeing that romance between Nicole and Kevin and seeing that battle that Nicole was dealing with knowing that Kevin could end up in the same boat as her brother. Overall this was a pretty great book I really enjoyed it.

Was this review helpful?

I’m impressed by the fact that no one acts like an idiot in this book. Okay, no one after Nicole leaves her door open on a busy street. Nicole doesn’t ever rush into danger to try and save Kevin and he always acts professionally. Everyone is fairly level headed all around. The conflicts – there is the main romance plus another between Jane and Charlie – are real and not “five minute conversation” ones. Nicole and Kevin and Jane and Charlie (sounds like a movie title, right?) have to work out how they feel about what is keeping their relationship in limbo and glory be, the story allows them time to do this so that I don’t feel that anything is a rushed decision.

Nicole gets to see everyday Kevin not being a firefighting hero too so I know she’s not being seduced by the whole “firefighters are sexy in their turnout gear as they save kittens and put out fires” cliché either. I’m also not usually one to go gushy over scenes with kids but Kevin’s two nieces are adorable and also a bit more than plot moppets. And they don’t lisp!

I did wonder at Jane who cheerfully shows up on (it seems like) every response loaded down with thermoses of coffee and blankets and who shoots questions at a fire chief as he runs a response scene. Pushy a little? Hmmmm. I also wonder if there will be any follow up on Nicole’s sister who appears briefly here. Perhaps another book is in the works?

But boo-yah for intelligent characters with realistic problems who get the time and space to work out thorny relationship issues and convince me that they’ve done so before committing to each other. And who save cats. B+

Was this review helpful?