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The Silken Web
The Silken Web
Author: Sandra Brown
ONE WOMAN, TWO MEN...ALL TRAPPED IN the silken web: Kathleen, a young sophisticate marrying one man while still in love with another...and hiding her pain behind hard work. Erik, a talented videographer who let Kathleen know he found women easy to love, but not to marry. — Seth, the wealthy heir to a department store fortune who could give Kathle...  more »
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ISBN-13: 9780446364799
ISBN-10: 0446364797
Publication Date: 10/1/1993
Pages: 352
Rating:
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
 98

3.5 stars, based on 98 ratings
Publisher: Warner Books
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

annalovesbooks avatar reviewed The Silken Web on
Helpful Score: 2
ISBN 0446364797 - This has got to be one of the hardest books for me to review yet. That's not because it's so good that I'm shocked speechless; it's not because it's so BAD that I'm at a loss for words - it's really that it's a combination. This is a really good, touching story... and some of the worst writing I've come across in a long time.

Kathleen was an orphan who found people she loved in B.J. and Edna, the people who ran the Mountain View Encampment, which was open to orphans like herself. As an adult, she returned to Mountain View as a counselor and B.J. and Edna were thrilled to have her. What they didn't know was that she'd quit her job, running away from a male co-worker who'd been coming on too strong.

Erik Gudjonsen was a videographer who came to Mountain View to do a piece about the place. He and Kathleen follow the path of all romance novel couples. They meet and clash, end up spending time together and fall in love, have sex and then tragedy strikes. Erik is badly injured in an accident and taken to a hospital where Kathleen sits, waiting for information when Mrs. Gudjonsen is shown directly into Erik's room. Unaware that this is his sister-in-law, and not bothering to ask, Kathleen flees without a word to anyone.

She finds work far away, working for Seth Kirchoff of Kirchoff's Department Stores - a paraplegic with a sense of humor and a heart of gold. When she wants to quit her new job because she's found out she's pregnant, he asks her to marry him. They wed and Erik's son is raised as Seth's own, sharing with his "parents" a wonderful, happy life until one day, in a strange twist of fate, Seth hires a man to make commercials for the stores - and that man is Erik.

Despite the ridiculousness of it, it's common in romance novels for people to meet and fall in love in under 48 hours, and certainly to wind up having sex. Especially when one of those people is a 25 year old virgin. If you've held onto your virginity that long, of course you're going to lose it to the first man to take you skinny dipping while you're supposed to be responsible for the well-being of a group of children. That's really not the worst of the book. The worst is that lines such as "The other young man had stood up in hopes of making a show of self-defense, but his belly was plowed into with an iron fist, and then, as he leaned over in agony, he, too, knew the rocketing pain of Erik's punch to his jaw." crop up, highlighting Brown's poor skills.

The sex scenes are even more badly done than that, with some of the most incredibly stupid things coming out of the mouths of Brown's characters. "Oh, Erik, I can't believe that you're touching me this way." "Believe it." and "Sweet...!" he grated. "You've always been ready for me, Kathleen. Oh, God, I thought my memory had embellished how good it was with us, but it hadn't. If anything, my love, the memory was diluted." made me laugh out loud - and not in a good way. On page 88, Kathleen refers to Erik as "vital to her life" - after knowing him for THREE DAYS!

Sadly, the story really IS good. Seth's unselfish handling of every aspect of his life, from his disability to raising Kathleen's son as his own, makes his final, most selfless act that much more touching. That Kathleen has a history of running away from problems makes Seth's suggestion of marriage more palatable - otherwise, it's impossible to believe that any two people would marry, love each other, and live sexlessly on separate floors of the same house. If Brown had just left out the really bad sex scenes and developed certain plot points better, I'd be happy to five star this. As it is, two's all I can do.

- AnnaLovesBooks
reviewed The Silken Web on + 4 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This was an okay book.
Satin43 avatar reviewed The Silken Web on + 157 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Nature-loving Kathleen, who, at the start, has given up her high-stress--plus sexually harassing--job as a fashion buyer in Atlanta to work as a counselor at a summer camp for orphans. Kathleen has a wild passionate love affair with Erik Gudjonsen, only to find hell never be hers. Will she settle for the man that does love her?
reviewed The Silken Web on + 612 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I really enjoyed this book.
reviewed The Silken Web on + 117 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Good story, a little sad at the end.
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mmartin avatar reviewed The Silken Web on + 22 more book reviews
Schyler Crandall was the adopted daughter of the most powerful man in town. She ran away a heartbroken girl, but has returned a grown woman who wants the one man she shouldn't have.


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