DEEP WATERS
BY JAYNE ANN KRENTZ, 1997
CONTEMPORARY ROMANCE
Pocket Books, ISBN: ISBN:
0-671-01738-1
Reviewed by: Linda Hurst (audio
version)
Published by Simon & Schuster
Inc.
Read By Moira Kelly

Charity Truitt is a corporate
executive that burned out at the age of 28. She has come to Whispering Waters
Cove for healing. She opened a bookstore on Crazy Otis Landing and began to form
a "family" of misfits who had also settled on the pier. Family in many
different forms is a recurring theme in JAK 's books and it is a theme we can
all identify with. The need to surround oneself with a "family" is a
universal one.
Elias Winters inherits the pier
and its shop from his long time mentor in a mysterious eastern philosophy of
water--Tal Kek Chara. One of the things I most admire about JAK is her ability
to create a universe within a universe. The sayings of Tal Kek Chara that open
each chapter and the underlying philosophy of Elias are completely her
invention. Yet, they are just skewed enough from Zen that you smile a little
each time you read one. Reminds me of the truly awful western poetry she
invented for Between the Lines--absolutely hysterical.
Elias has also burned out--from a
quest for revenge. He has spent all of his adult life trying to avenge the death
of his father. When he finally has the means for his revenge, his mentor dies
and he realizes that there will be no satisfaction in destroying the other man.
Elias and Charity were obviously made for each other. There is a bizarre cult
and a murder plot, but neither of these get in the way of Charity and Elias's
developing relationship, which is how it should be in a good romance novel.
Moira Kelly is very good. She has
a deep alto voice which is very believable for Elias and Charity. The only
quibble I would have is a horrible southern accent she gives Radiance. Luckily,
Radiance has only a few lines or this would become a "wallbanger". The
banter between Elias and Charity is adult and witty. The abridgment is quite
good--perhaps the only thing I missed was the "hot" dinner in the
book--I think that would have been wonderful on tape, but that is a small
quibble. Overall a very good listen.
Linda Hurst
