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| Broken | 
enlarge | Author: Megan Hart Publisher: Spice Category: Book
List Price: $13.95 Buy New: $8.31 You Save: $5.64 (40%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 28 reviews Sales Rank: 7168
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 384 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5.1 x 1.1
ISBN: 0373605153 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6 EAN: 9780373605156 ASIN: 0373605153
Publication Date: May 1, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.
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Product Description My name is different every month -- Brandy, Honey, Amy-sometimes Joe doesn't even bother to ask -- but he never fails to arouse me with his body, his mouth, his touch, no matter what I'm called or where he picks me up. The sex is always amazing, always leaves me itching for more in those long weeks until I see him again. My real name is Sadie, and once a month over lunch Joe tells me about his latest conquest. But what Joe doesn't know is that, in my mind, I'm the star of every X-rated one-night stand he has revealed to me, or that I'm practically obsessed with our imaginary sex life. I know it's wrong. I know my husband wouldn't understand. But I can't stop. Not yet.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 23 more reviews...
Deeply moving and sensitive erotic tale July 10, 2007 52 out of 55 found this review helpful
Sadie's a therapist whose beloved husband Adam was paralyzed four years ago in a skiing accident. She's catered to him out of love and loyalty, but longs to have someone hold her and touch her. Adam has withdrawn from life and as she holds on by a thread, she fears her loyalty is being put to the test when she looks forward to her once-a-month visits with Joe Wilder. At their lunchtime meetings, Joe shares his sexcapades with Sadie, in great detail, with Sadie imagining herself as a participant. She doesn't mean to be disloyal to Adam, she just needs a release and time to herself. The erotic passages are very detailed and each encounter provides further insight to Joe's character. Sadie teeters on that thin cusp between her love for her husband and her need to escape her obligations. A secondary plot includes Elle Kavanaugh, from Hart's previous novel "Dirty"; she's a patient of Sadie's and is about to embark on a new odyssey in her life.
I feared that this book was about infidelity and that I would be upset like I was after reading Lolly Winston's "Happiness Sold Separately." I couldn't have been more wrong; rather than infidelity, it's a portrayal of a women's quest for a sense of her own self-identity after suffering a huge blow that alters the future she and Adam carefully mapped out. I laughed; I cried; I absolutely loved this book. Megan Hart writes so eloquently and draws the reader in that they feel like they know these characters. Her portrayal of quadriplegic Adam, warts and all was incredible and sensitive. Megan is definitely the queen of "eroplotica" - erotic novels with actual storylines. I look forward to each novel she writes.
Megan Hart's Best Book Yet April 30, 2007 45 out of 47 found this review helpful
All the usual disclaimers apply - I know Megan, she's my friend and we've given each other nicknames and all that stuff. Still, she's not ensorcelled me so I'm incapable of an actual honest opinion on her book although dude, if she had that power it would be so cool, I'd totally make her use it on my behalf. Anyway, I digress...
Broken is a lot of things. It's one of those books that stays with you a really long time after you finish because there are a lot of layers to it. In my opinion, it's the best thing Megan has written and she's a darned good writer so that should say something. Each time Sadie sits next to Joe and we hear a tale of his latest conquest, we're really drawing down another layer of Sadie.
Whatever Broken is about, I can tell you what it's not about - Broken is not about infidelity. I want to make that clear up front. Sadie loves Adam, her husband. But Adam has withdrawn himself emotionally after an accident has left him a quadroplegic. She's lost him in many ways even though he's there physically. Her entire being centers around his care and schedule - it isn't that she hates him or wishes he didn't exist, it isn't that she wants to sleep with Joe behind Adam's back. Her life has made her into a mechanism - she takes care of everyone else and she doesn't get much emotional feedback because her husband has lost himself and she's helpless to help him regain what he's lost. So for that one brief time every month, she's unfettered from all that responsibility and context and she gets to be a woman.
She wants to be held and listened to and those brief times once a month as she sits and listens to Joe tell his stories, she can transport herself elsewhere in her head.
Sadie's loneliness is sharp and painful at times. Her loss throbbed in my gut as I read. Her connection to Joe, his attraction to her, her committment to Adam and her embracing her life no matter what it has become creates a book that sent me reeling over and over.
Broken is not an easy book. It's not lighthearted and romantic. It's an unflinching look into someone's inner life. I cried when I read Broken. It made me furious. It made me laugh and grumble. It drove me to email Megan a few times and give her what for.
Broken is evocative and deep and disturbing and yet, it's uplifting too. Because Sadie can be any of us, you know? And she survives and rises and finds her way in a world that could easily drive her to give up for let go of the things that anchor her - to her life, to her husband, to everything she finds important. She's not a saint, she doesn't take care of Adam because she loves the hairshirt, she takes care of him because he's her husband and she loves him and it's the right thing to do and she believes that. That makes Sadie a character that rises above so many other characters in books. She's flawed, yes, but she's *real*
Broken is erotic, yes. The sex is integral to the story as a vehicle for Sadie's mental escape and also as a glimpse into Joe. The story is in first person but I really felt I knew Joe and his insecurities as he told his stories. In them he's not a sex god, his vision of himself is interesting and pretty unflinching. The moments between Sadie and Adam are heartwrenchingly beautiful and skillfully done and the connection between Joe and Sadie is powerful as well.
I've gone back and forth writing this, it's hard to distill what Broken is because I think everyone will read Sadie with their own filters. And because Broken is a complex book. It's not easy. But it's worth it. Broken is, without question, an amazing book and I truly hope it gets the attention it deserves. Technically, it's mindblowing. As an author, when I read it, I was floored by the skill Megan used as a writer. The story is marvelous but she tells it perfectly.
Loved this book! May 26, 2007 24 out of 30 found this review helpful
I just finished this book, read it in only 2 days (would have been 1 but unfortunately I had to have some rest). I'm usually a fan of your typical romance/erotic novel for the escape from everyday life, but never have I been so pleased to find such a wonderful plot. The characters are so developed. I laughed & cried. Alot of times I sell my books after reading them, but this is one that I'll keep on the shelf to read again and again. I've never read anything by Megan Hart before, but I've just ordered Dirty and hope to be as pleased as I was with Broken. Please keep in mind that this is an erotic novel and there are some very steamy scenes. However, you'll be so impressed with the rest of the story. I would highly recommend this book! I loved it!
deep character study May 2, 2007 7 out of 22 found this review helpful
Every month over the past year, psychologist Sadie Danning and mediator Joe Wilder meet for lunch on a public bench where he tells her his latest sexual escapades. Sadie misses what Joe has as her spouse Adam, whom she met in college, has since become a quadriplegic due to an accident. Adam hides his feelings from Sadie. Although he teaches online literature classes at Penn State, he stopped writing poetry. However she remains faithful to him physically, but in her dreams she is Joe's flavor of the month. Thus she lives precariously fantasizing that she is the star of Joe's tales of sexual conquest. This month she is Mary of quite contrary fame.
She does not need to be a shrink to know she craves the real thing as memories of her love life with her husband and hearing Joe's encounters only help so far. She also realizes how attracted she is to Joe, but hides even from herself how deep inside her heart he truly is. Fantasy and reality suddenly merge as desire supersedes all else between Sadie and Joe, but what happens afterward if they succumb to the heated spice they both covet.
This is a deep character study that takes the readers inside the heads of the lead triangle. Fans will ironically know more of what Sadie and Adam feel than each does of the other as both hides their concerns and fears. The audience also learns why Joe has different women each month as the female he loves is a martyr out of reach though he shares his exploits with her every month. Megan Hart provides a powerful contemporary tale that although the climax is too convenient, fans will feel immense empathy with the trio.
Harriet Klausner
Amazing May 10, 2007 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
I finished this book last night. I got to a point where I couldn't put it down and stayed up way too late because it was that compelling. This is the first book I've read by Megan Hart and I have now added 5 others written by her to my Wish List, Dirty being at the very top.
There was so much emotion in this book, and I believe it to be a cautionary tale of what happens when we take the deceivingly easy route of hiding our feelings from those who are most important to us. It creates distance and makes strangers out of the closest of loved ones. And if we aren't careful, they are gone without warning, leaving all the meaningful things unsaid and unfelt.
This book wasn't your typical romance. Sadie is truly torn between who she is and who she wants to be. A constant theme is playing the roles we're expected to play - the smart one, the pretty one, the athlete, the slut - and breaking out of those molds and stereotypes to be the person we really are in all situations and environments.
The best thing I can say about Broken is it left me wishing I had the kind of talent for writing that Megan Hart possesses. It was a fantastic read and I can't recommend it enough.
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